-j amjci mmmk -p . P-.TM. . lania$te Volume XVH-Ne. 135. LANCASTER, PA., MONDAY, FEBEUAHY 7, 1881 Price Tire Oiti, ffl) VLOTHINU. JOHN WANAMAKER. DRY GOODS If you cannot visit tlie city, send te us by postal card ier HOUSEKEEPER'S PRICE LIST and UNDERWEAR PRICE LIST. We fill orders by letter from every Slate ami Territory nt same prices charged customers who visit tlie store, and allow same privilege of return. The stock include lMcsrtUoeds, .Silks, LuceH, Fancy Goods, and general eutllN. AND FEBRUARY. Grand Depot, GREAT SLAUGHTER IN CLOTHING. GRAHD IAEK DOW AT CEITEE HALL. Will bu sold in sixty days TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS WORTH f HEAVY WINTER CLOTHING, Without, regard te cel. New is your time te secure a geed Suit of Clothing for very little money, Ready-Hindu or ..lade te Order. OVERCOATS IN GREAT VARIETY, Fer Men. Youth-, and ISuys. Men's Dress Suits, Men's Itusinc Suits, Youths' Suits in every style. Heys' Clothing, a very Choice Variety, 9'jjr Don't fail te cull and .secure some of the bargains. MYERS & RATHFON, . 12 EAST KING STltEET, LANCASTER, PEJLVA. WATCUES, JEWELRY, &e. We have juat placed en exhibition about ene hundred Oil Paintings, all handsomely framed. They embracea wide range of subjects, from the familiar Madennas and Hely Families of the celebrated masters of painting, te the illustration of hu morous scenes in real life. Our collection includes Figure Pieccn, Bird and Animal Paint ings, Landscapes, Ancient and Modern Architecture, Ancient Ruins, Character and Costume Studies, &c, &c. Classical, His torical, Mythological and Ideal Subjects, &c. We have a number of very fine specimens of the sculptor's art, in beautiful white marble figures, mounted en colored marble columns. We take pride in placing these sroeds before our patrons, be lieving that our community must appreciate our endeavor te popularize a class of fine goed3, that could net heretofore be ob tained except from abroad. H. Z. RHOADS & BRO., Jewelers, 4 West King Street, - Lancaster, Pa. ED W. J. Z Arli, Manufacturing Jeweler, Zahm's Cerner, - Lancaster, Pa. A FULL STOCK OF Lancaster Watches, Waltham Watches, Elgin Watches, Columbus Watches and Springfield Watches, In CeM and Silver C:i-s, Key and Stem Winding, :i( LOWEST CASH PRICK. AX ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF SILVER AND SILVER-PLATED WARE, KNIVES, FORKS, SPOONS, &v., OF THE BEST GRADES ONLY. Manufacturing and Repairing Jewely a puf ialty. Fine Wateli Repairing given personal attention. Every article sold or repaired gtiivriiiitccd'. at v ZAHM'S CORNER. LANCASTER, PA. miLLISEKY NOTICE TO THE LADIES! TIIK CHEAPEST, FINEST AXI) REST STOCK MILLINERY AND TRIMMING GOODS ! IX THIS CITY IS AT M. A. HAUGHTON'S, 25 North Queen Street. We receive constantly and daily New Goods, and all the latest styles of Millinery Goods and Dress Triiumltigs. Alse constantly en haud a line stock of Crepe nuts and Rennets ; line Crape Veils, fine Crepes by the yard and at.all price, ami Kid Cleves in all sizes, prices and shades. If veu wish te 11 ml tlie"clieapc-tnnd fines! line of Fringes, Laces, Silks. Satins, go te HAUCUTOX'S, for they keep the best sleck in the city: and it" you wish te 11 nil the cheapest, finest and best liucet Embroideries, lnsci tings and line White Lascs go te HAUGHTON'S, for tliey have the finest, cheapest and best line in this city. Alse, constantly en hand, the largest stock et Ribbons in this city. In all shades, prices and qualities; Silk Handkerchief:!, Cutis, Cellars, Fancy Goods and everything kept in a first-class M illinery and Trimming Stere : and it you wish te go te the cheapest and best Millinery Stere in this city, go te M. A. HAUGHTON'S, 25 North Queen Street. iticr I0KER, COLLADAY & Ce, 1412 and 1414 Chestnut St. PHILADELPHIA. The general improvement, in business the past yean, with the prospect, el a very large in creased demand for all kinds of Dress Ceeds, induced all American buyers et' Foreign Ceeds te place immense orders. This was universally the ease, j-e much se that, perhaps without exag geration, SO per cent, mere goods were imported than the country could possibly consume. As u consequence, then- has been a great break in price in a great ninny fabrics, which we s'jall fully meet. WE SHALL SELL Fermer Prices. AH Weel Aruiurcs -fci.-jr, $0.5(1 1.IK) 1.50 French Flannel Suitings in French Striped Fancies (all Silk and Weel) 7.1 French Shoedas (in all colors) in French Brocades (all Silk and Wl OOl ................. ..n) Plain French Plaids 75 Finest French Brocades (in several designs)...... 1.00 1.7.'. I.lk) I.V) In addition te our offerings in the above of which it is difficult te meet the domain cloth and colorings. CLOTH SUITINGS: 41-iiicli cloth Suitings (very desirable 51-inch Cleth Suitings (in all colors 1.10 04-inch Cleth Suitings 1.20 FRENCH SHOODAS : Our make of these goods we believe te be the best in the market, and the nsertmcnt et colors our own bcleclieii. 46-inch French Shoedos $0.S7 4G-inch French Shoedas ?1.12 PINE CAMEL'S HAIR: , JriS9S.ert,ncnt "' tL" sc "eamifiil goeils is sti'l complete, from Sl.SS-te S2.50. We have IS9 JSi IP" ?t,aiC V1 C:lmel s ";llr i11 Kvening sii:,ics in verv beautiful quality, in Cream, rink and Light Blue, 4; inches wide, te sell at SI. 25. m BAREGE DE VTRGINIE: ,We lavc Just received one case of this very desirable texture rerKvcniiicDicPSCS. aunlitv Toryjsupcrier, in Cream, Vlnk and tight Mine ,27 inches wide, te sell ti 50c. qnnij FOR JANUARY This is the particular season in which te get and prepare HOUSEKEEPING DRY GOODS Sheetings, Pillow Materials, Linens, Napkins, Towels, &c. It is silse the season for Ladies Underwear. The Grand Depot contains the greatest variety of goods In one establishment In the United States, and exchanges or refunds money for things that de net suit, upon exam ination at home. Philadelphia. aoens. Fermer Prices. Camei's Hair Stripes 0.C5 $1.12 liroCTvic-XevelUes French Fancies (very costly goods.. English Novelties French Handkerchiefs, squares French Handkerchiefs, squares French Novelties French Novelties .75 .) .75 2.73 .i .50 .-.: i.re .65 1.50 1.25 2.75 .50 1:50 goods, we have some lines of very choice goods hi wiucii we nave a very choice assortment, oetii in 51-inch Cleth Suitings... 51-inch Cleth Suitinirs... 51-ineh Cleth Suitings... .$1.23 . 1.50 . 2.00 CLOIHIXQ. OVERCOATS! Closing out at a great reduction eurimmen-c line of Novelties in Overceatings. Pur Beavers, Seal Skin, Elysiari; Mentanak, Batina and Chinchillas. All the New and most Desirable Styles STOCKANETTS, IX XKW COLORS AXI) CHOICE STYLES Wliy net leave veur order at once and secure an Elegant, Stylish, Well Made and Artistic Cut Garment as low a.-; $30.- A LARGE LIXi; OF CHOICE I IK AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, AT J.KSMALINGKS, THE ARTIST TAILOR, 121 N. QUEEN STREET, 31 WAS A RARE CHANCE! The Greatest Reduction ever made inFIXE WOOLENS for CENTS' WEAR at H. GERHABT'S t. A Large Assortment of Genuine English & Scotch Suiting Ol sold during the Fall Season lreiii iiSIJO te !40. A Suit will bit made up te order in tin; Me-d. Style irem -'0 te W.'SO. HEAVY W-EICIIT DOMESTIC Suiting and Overceating, Hciluced in the sumo proportion. All ;;ie:N wan-anted as representuil. The above reduction will ler rash imiv. and ler the next TITIUTY DAYS. H. GERHART, Ne. 51 North Queen Street. Special Announcement ! New is your time te sccmc bargains in CLOTHING ! Te make room foreurlaro steclc of Cloth ing for Spring, new being' maniifiiriuriMl. we will make sweeping reductions throughout our large stock of HEAVY WEIGH! CLOMI, CONSISTING !' Overcoats, Suits, &c, MEN, BOYS AX YOUTHS. OHHS AXDEXOS OF CLOTHING IX COATS, 1'AXTS AXO VESTS, ISEI.OW COST. Call early Ut .-ceure the best bargains. D. I Hosteller i l ru H 24 CENTRE SQUARE, Olyd la.vast;:i:. 1'a VAllVETS. H:ghkst l'.WII i cash rmcr: . 1Y1I.I. 1!K :'Oit KXTltA X ICE CARPET BAGS. Carpets made te order at short notice and satislactien gnar.inteed. Iturc chauctts in Carpets te reduce stock et s m obi AT AND ISELOW COS1 Call and satisly yourself. Alse, Ingrain, l.'ag and Chain CarpetsinalmestcndlessvariPly .at H. S. SHIEK'S CARPET HALL, 203 WEST KING STREET, LANCASTER I'A. AKfl-.TS, t!()AI,, . PHILIP SCHU3I, SON & CO., MANUKA CTOKY, Xe. 15(1 SOUTH WATER STI5KET, I.ANCA8TK1I, lA., Well-known Manufacture!;! ofOfHiim efOfHiim LANCASTER QUILTS, COUXTKUl'AXES, COVERLETS. BLANKETS, CAUl'KTS. CAKl'KT CHAIN, STOCKING YARN, &c. CUSTOM RAG CARPETS A SPECIALTY. LANCASTER FANCY DYEING ESTABLISHMENT. Press Goods Dyed either in tlieplccoer in Garments: also, ;ill kinds of silks, Ribbons, Linen, Cotten and Woolen Goods Dyed. Gen tlemen's Coats, Overcoats. Pants, Vests, Ac, Dyed or Sceun.il; also, Indigo IJlue Dyeing done. All orders or goods lell with us will receive; prompt attention. CASH PAID FOR SEWED CARPET RAGS. COAL. COAL. Ceal of the best quality put up expressly lev family use, and at the lowest market rates. TRY A SAMPLE TON. YAKD-150 .OUTH WATER STREET. d-22-lvdRSl PHILIP SCIIUM, SON & CO MM faileM Eaiuastrc Infcllurrncn MONDAY EVENING, FEB. 7, 1881. THOMAS CAEM TilKSAGU OF UHKI.SKA DEAD AT THE KII'K AGE OF J-.IUUTY-SIX YE.lllS, HIS LIFE, WORKS AND INFLUENCE. Tlie Career or a PJiilosepber Who Leaves a Deep Impression en Aleilrrn Thought. Themas CavIyJe was a contributor te the Londen Megazinc as Ien;j age as 1S24. He was born at Ecelefeehan, Dumfricsliire, Scetlaml, en the 4th of December, lTD.Ii. lie was a fellow student with Edward Ir vinir, who was tiircc years elder than liim- sclf, at Edinburgh. When IS years old he became an assistant teacher at Kirkcaldy, where, he used te say, he and Irving " strove by virtue of birch and book te in itiate the urchins into what is called the rudiments of learning."' Although des tined by his parents for the ministry, and studying for a time with that design, he found that reading and study had led him away from the faith of his lathers, and he abandoned the notion of becoming a preacher, Jlewasan ardent student al ways, and while acting as tutor in a pri vate family made himself master of the German language and literature. He wrote an "Essay en Proportion," which wasprclixcd te a translation of Legendre'.s geometry. His "Life of Schiller"' was published in the Londen Magazine. He translated Geetiie's " AVilhelm Meistcr" in 1824, "Specimens of German Kemancc" in 1827, and furnished many biographies from time te time te the Edinburgh Ciclo Cicle pcdiit. His miscellanies were collected by Kaiph Walde Emersen, and published in this country in 1845. i In 1831 Caijylc took with him te Londen his book "Sartor Re&artus,? and vainly endeavored te sell it. He at length jret it published in Frazcr's Magazine, but it was net until years aftciward that it was fully appreciated. Carlyle's work. "The French Revolution," was published in 18:'7, and became noted for its novel method of pre senting history. His essay en " Charac teristics"" was issued in 1831. He pub lished a work en "Chartwm" in 181t, en "Here Worship" in 1SI0. and " Past and Present" iiilSl:. Mr. Carlyle's complete works comprise nearly forty volumes. He wrote volumin ously for the FiUnlmrgJi Jieticw and the Foreign Quarterly. His " Count Caglios Caglies Caglios tre"' and "Diamond Necklace' weie not able. He published "Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell" in IS 15, a scries of attcr Day Pamphlets" in lS"i(), a "Life of.Tehu Sterling" in 1851, and a " History of Frederick the Great," the last volume of which was published in 1SG1. His inau gural addte.vs in 1800, when he was elected in his G5th year te the presidency of his beloved Edinburgh university, was re printed almost all ever the world. , Carlyle was married in 1820 te Jan.! Welch, of Craigcnputtech, where she owned a small estate, en which he lived for a time. There for six years, among granite hille and black morasses, fifteen miles from a town, he read and wrote in peace. His wife claimed te be , lineal de scendant of Jehn Knox. He lived many happv years with her and te the last el" his life never ceased his frequent pilgrim ages te her grave. Cnas. A. Dana's ::i!lej;y. New Yerk Sun. What Carlyle would have been had his life been contemporary with that storm and stress period of which he made him self the eulogist, we can guess by recall ing what Rinhter was. There was. in deed, a surprising likeness in the gifts, acquirements, ethical convictions, and ar tistic methods of the two men, and an equally curious coincidence was disclosed in their fei tunes and careers. IJeth were the sons of peer men, and betii wen for themselves, at the cost of net a little harsh toil and privation, a university edu cation. Jleth were omnivorous rather than sympathetic- readers, and of both it might be said that, te the last, they had never nuhiened for themselves a definite, coherent system of philosophy. i'eth were constrained, for a long- time, te eke eat a subsistence by the trade of school master, and both gained but a tardy rec ognition from publisheis or readers, owing te their intensely empha sized and grotesque originality. Beth wrote prose, but both were poet in the loftiest and deepest meaning of the word. Se far as each bore a mes sage te his time he spoke as a bard rather than a philosopher, as a prophet and net as a lawgiver. Each exhibited a con tempt of conventional forms and ac cepted caiii-.ns of ait which hud never been parallelled in literature save by llabelias, and each combined with a boundless humor net unworthy of the creator of "Gargan tua" an exquisitivc sensilivcneMs te sor row, and a heart-piercing pathe.? of which their jovial Fecnch forerunner had exhibit ed no sign. That Carlyle was a student and disciple of J. 'an Paul, that he strove te supplement and develop:', spiritual affinity by conseiom assimilation, is sufficiently obvious te the most casual reader. That there was, however, no question here of servile imitation, but that the younger man's relation te Ilichtcr suggests rather the intercommunications of equal souls, is plain from the fiec play which Carlyle gave te his own temperament, and from his fundamentally distinct attitude and point of view. The German was by nature as genial and gleesome as the Scotchman was grim and saturnine ; there war, some thing spertful in the gleams of the former's irony cempaied with the excoriating strokes of the hitter's sarcasm. There was something joyous, sanguine, hopeful, in Hichter's giance, as well became one who had witnessed the upheaval of his nation under Stein and llardcnbarg, and watched the unfolding of that Iliad whose climax came at Lcipsie. Kidder's last years, like Carlyle's were shattered and cleumlcd by physical decay, and the au thor of " Titan"' can scarcely be said te have beheld the pitiful extinction of the dream which had premised a free Ger many. It would have been impossible for Car lyle, had he been naturally less sembre and splenetic, te Ikive turned a cheerful and complacent eye en the England for which he began te write. When, about 18'M, "Satter JJssartus" was contributed te Frazcr's Magazine, the combative period which culminated at Waterloo had long been ever, and the industrial period was in the full tide of covetous, accumulative energy. The reaction against the strain and outpour, the tremendous sacrifices and dear-bought glories of the Napoleonic era, had then in fact readied its height. It was essentially a recuperative interval, during which exhausted England took ac count of stock, but, by comparison, it looked te the ireful vision of the Scotch cni husiast net only a prosaic, but a shabby, sordid, impotent and despicable age. With the aims, sentiments, standards, and arbi ters of such a time Catlylc had net a trace of sympathy. He lifted up his voice iu outcry and reared his arm against them all ; he made it the business of his life te thwack the fulminate against the philosophy of Bentham and what he deemed its ignominious outcome in society and legislation. On the ether hand he strove te probe the heart and fire the bleed by an eloquence that often lacked but the form te rival the master works of epic loftiness and lyric power, an elo quence that seemed te range through the whole gamut of emotion, new quivering with tragic griff, new searing te dim heights of solemn aspiration, and new rioting in grim yet contagious raillery. Ner should we forget that the ideals which may new seem erratic and one-sided, but which Carlyle never wearied of upholding and enforcing by all the means in his I arge grasp by history, biography, critical essay, and political pamphlet were admirably adapt ed te control and discredit the tendencies of his day. It was, as we have said, an age when men looked rather le utility than te ideal perfection, when thev thought mere of craft than force, when they cared less for power than money, when the peer did net seau tee narrowly the instruments of wealth, and when the rich were apt te account their weik fin ished, and te watch the tragic comedy of jiie wun n.stie?s unconcern, neither was the epoch of the Chartists and the Cern law agitation the only modern period marked by commonplace and ignoble fea tures. In the world about us we may recognize-net a few of the same traits ; and while this remains true, the teachings of Themas Carlyle, which smote the ears of his own age like a clarion, will lese lit tle of their pertinence and power. Anether Neble Tribute. Philadelphia Times. He toiled for a long time as Milten toil ed, as Bacen toiled, as Lecke toiled, guid ed only by his own overmastering instinct of the Ged-given mission fecundating his theugnt, upholding his Hunting courage. He was during the first fifty years of his life the epitome and full consummate real ization of his own definition of genius. The power te work, te give attention te details, te be as accurate "in the color of a man's complexion, . iu art, as iu tracing the heredity that shaped his trait" His pictures of men come before the reader as clearly cut, as minutely fashioned in out line, as a portrait of Titian or Velasquez. I lis Mirabcau, Cromwell, Frederick, La fayette, Luther Burns and Rebespierre will coexist with the language in which they are written. Truth, and tfiat insti lled, was his mission, but truth te liim was a l)eaeen el constantly changing lights. Nene but the strong steed fully in its white glare, but once uuJer its effulgent luinineusucss no defects appeared te the blinded eyes of the worshiper. Iu ether words, force, the strong man, moving en a heroic plane, with trampled peoples and overturned systems as the irtighty frame work of their action. He began, the apos tle of progress iu the widest s,cnse, the ally of reform, the evangel of humanity. H ended the advocate endowed beyond any ether thinker of his lime, the Abdiel of reaction, the panegyrist of bleed and iron, the bondsman of force. He began his teachings with perhaps the clearest insight into the history of the past of any man who has written since St. Paul. He was near the woes of the race as he set out, but day by day battling hosts arose and they seemed net only te dim his vision but chill the ardor of his soul for the things'that had at first fired his pen. The conquest of peoples by great became his ideal of force in action. The revolt of peoples against wairiers and systems of tyranny became te him the " infinite babblement'' of feels. The tremendous outburst of the French Revolution at first fascinated him, but the very intensity of what Bacen calls the "dry light" of history, which his n-,vn band ha i lit, brought out only the most balefii! actors for the contemplation and admiration of mankind. It would be difficult te set bounds te the majesty of his intellectual march in dealing with the occult in history. It would be net less difficult te point out the real tendency, con trasting his. earlier with his later aims. His life-work, like that of a great tumul tuous river, cannot be told while the an gry, swirling billows of its force are still flowing en, deafening as well as dazzling the beholder. The noblest maxims of life, the most austere cede of morals, the most inspiring incentives te action, may be found in every chapter he has written. These are brought into the most incongruous ap position, te the most mournful prostration before the veiled gods of absolutism, mys ticism an.! kin j craft. The whole life life theituht. of his later years was devoted te the teaching that the people, like the children of Israel, had sinned from their very nature and that it was the will of Ged that a king that R a force should be sc-t in perpetuity ever them. He went much further than the prophet who gave Israel a king as punishment ; he set the king up as i he be all and end all as the sign an 1 token of a well-ordered system. Yet even in these teachings he was as grandly inconsistent as he was grandly bold in turning back the mighty current of his own iir.st overwhelming maelstrom of though'. Indeed, a ma'.-'strem is the one object in nature that the man's vast life work may he likened te. it, hjh no insin iiiii;j :usl no end ; the truths I hat sire helil en the topmost, crest of its swift-rushing current at one moment sink .submerged the next under the crested breakers of para dox, contradiction and denial, only 'te rc rc cmcrjje :!..; tin ei a broader circle and in calmer sweps clarified by temporary sub sub nier.sieu. The evil that t lie ordinary man may d lives ai'ter him and Hie geed is apt te hn interred with his bones. It will net be se with Carlyle ; his evil will serve te threw into mere imposing outlines the geed, which shall live, as long after him as human .speech is the medium of thought as long as the teachings of Plate or Aris totle and with a hundredfold their force. CAKLYLK'S IXDl'STKV. Tlie Accident t "Tlic freneli ircvidutlen." In ISrJT Carlyle published "The French devolution; a History."' it.; publication was delayed by the accidental burning of the lir-sl volume just as it was ready for the printers. Culyle had lent the matui .script of the iir.st volume te Jehn Stttatt Mill, who carried it te Jlr.s. Tayler, the lady whom he afterwards nianUd. liy some strange areidmfc it w;::- left exposed, aud a stupid servant lighted the liies with it. When the author itcatd of this mis fortune, he was like :i man be.-ide himself, as there was scarcely a page of the manu script left. Sitting down at the table, he strove te collect his thoughts. :n:d began te rewrite, but only te run his pen through each page as it was liuished. lJeggcdly persevering, however, Carlyle tinis-hed the volume at last, after five months" labor. Carlyle, had however, no reproaches for the friend who had caused him the trouble. 5ut he describes the work el rewriting that volume as one prolonged agony. lie undertook the taslc at once, but failed through severe mental depression. lie then devoted several weeks te novel read ing as a relaxation aud se finally succeeded in reproducing the book. A friend of Car lyle, in an article upon the burning of the volume, says : "After tive mouths of perseverence he rewrote it, having calmed himself suffi ciently by reading all the novels of Capt. Marryatt. This second production he pro nounced afterwards as better than the first. His own account of his feelings at the time is both humorous and sad. 'There was scarcely a page of manuscript left,' he says. ' I sat down at the table and strove te collect my thoughts and te commence my work again. I filled page after page, but ran the pen through every line as the page was finished. Thus was it for many a weary day until, at length, as I sat by the window, half-hearted and de jected, my eye .wandered along ever acres of reefs,I saw a man standing upon a scaffold engaged in building a wall the wall of a house. With a trowel Jie'd lay a great splash of mortar upon the last layer, aud then brick after brick would be deposited en this, striking each with the butt of his trowel, as if te give it his bcuedictien and farewell ; and all the while singing or whistling as blithe as a lark. And in my spleen I said te myself, " Peer feel ! Hew canst thou be se merry under such a bile-spotted atmosphere as this, aud everything rushing into the re gions of the insane ?" and then I bethought me. and I said te myself, " Peer feel thou, rather, that sittcst here by the window whining and complaining." ' The result was that he began te pick up courage ; he rcau light literature te induce a proper vacuity of mind, and in course of time things came out all right." Never " bull-deiu" a man, but if you meet n human being autlertng with a bad cough you nmy 'bull-dese" him te advantage with Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup. Newspaper Advertising. Few persons se lully appreclute the value et newspaper advertising- as these suttcrius; from Ililieusness or Liver Complaint, when they read the advertisement of Spring Rloesoin and try it. Price, SO cents, trial bottles 10 cent. Fer sale by II. U. Cochran, druggist, 137 and i:sy North Queen street, Lancaster. Pa. Te Virtneaaa. Every man feels better when the possessor of a line picture, partteularly it its en the uacuet a hundred dollar note, and every man lecls better after taking Spring lilossem, sure cure for Liver, Kidney and Bladder com plaints. Price, 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cent. Fer sale by II. B. Cochran, druggist. 137 and 133 North Queen street, Lancaster, l'a. PAVER HAXOlXas, Se. e UK STOCK OF Fer the season of 1SSI shall far exceed any et our previous etferts. Wc have made large con- u.iuia rtiin mi; iiiaiiiuacuircrs ana me goeu.s are new being shipped as promptly as made. ALL STYLES OF PAPER HANGDOGS from the lowest gradu te the finest goedi. Plain Window (Shades, All Celers and Widths. Fancy Dade and Baud Shades in large variety. Fixtures, Paper Cur tains, EXTENSION WINDOW CORNICE, Poles, Scotch and American Hollands, Leeps, Picture Nulls, &c. Orders taken ler line Mir rors. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. 4VRN1XUKE. pUKf-HAMKlt LOOK! LOOK!! Loek te your Interest. Yen cim liny at ITEIXITSHS, 13J EAST KINO STREET. Parler Suits ? 13 te $1.10 Library Suits 73 te 130 Wulmit Chamber Suit -10 te 245 C'ettase Suits te 45 Lounges 5(0 (0 Patent Keeker $.S0te 40 &e., &c., ie. We will continue te give prices successively of goe;ls in our line. Leeking Glasses, Picture Frames, mill FINK GOLD FUAMESspnciiiltlesut prices that itary eoiiipctien. It is always :i pleasure te show goeils at the t'!IE.lVST FURMTUKK STOKE I THE CITY. All .muni guaranteed :iccerillr.K te merits.; HEINITSH, 1 .-.,'; ITAST KING STKEET, iaiiS-finul Over China Hull. 701: itKi.i.ni.r. FURNITTJRB Call at the Ol.l l-Mahlbhcit Stan.l of Widmyer & Ricksecker, S. 1'. Cor. E. King and Duke SIR. PARLOR, CHAMBER AND LI BRARY suns. HALL, DINING ROOM AND KITCHEN FURNITURE. MATTKKSsKS AMI IIKD SPKINOS. '1 he I.ai'K:l and Finest Assortment, 11 nil inestyull IIOME-MAOK WOKK. Personal Attention given te UNDERTAKING. WIDMYER& RICKSECKER S. K. COIt. K. KINU AND DDKJS STS. CU1SA AXJi UZASSWARt. CHINAHALL. CHINA, GLASS AND QUEENSWARE, AT ROOK BOTTOM PRICES, AT IS KAST KINU STKKET. if3"IIeiisekcepers give 119 u call. HIGH & MARTIN. HOOTS AND SHOES. l.t A OV BOOTS. SHOES AMD I. AST JkjJ O X made en a new principle, lnsur in" comfort for the feet. BOOTS tcbU-tM I-'ists made te enw. MILLER, 133 East King straet vvall Pfmer and Winflew S&afles JEWXHSMS. teuiswebbr, Xj watchmaker. Ne. 159K NORTH QUEEN STREET, near P. U. R. Depot, Lancaster, Pa. Geld, Silver anil Nickel-cased Watches, Chains, Clocks, Ac. Agent ler the celebrated Pantasceptc Sin-cta-eles and Eye-GIatacs. Repairing a specialty, aprl-lrd HEADQUARTERS FUR PURE CONFEC TIONS FOR THE HOLIDAYS AT 500 SETS SIL.TCR-ri.ATKl TABLE SPOONS. TEA SPOONS. MEDIUM AND DESSERT FORK?, DESSERT AND MEDIUM KNIVES, AT AUGUSTUS RHOADS'S, Jeweler, 20 Eat Kins Street, Lancaster, l'a. "lT7"HOI.ESAl.K AND UF.TAII. Watches aud Clocks, -OF- ALL GRADES AND PRICES. E. F. BOWMAN, IOC EAST KlNii STREET. J. R CALDWELL & CO. 902 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA. DIAMOND HANTS, JEWELERS, SILVERSMITHS, AND IMPOUTHItS OF i EUROPEAN NOVELTIES, BRONZES. CLOOKS AND PORCELAINS, ask particular attention te their su perb stock of goedB, especially adapted for HOLIDAY GUTS! The assortment in every Depart ment is unequaled, and the prices '(always the lowest) will be found most acceptable. 23?OrderB and inquiries by mail will receive prompt attention. HWK HOOKS AN1 HTATI0NEKY. y-ALEXTlNKS! American and Imported Valentines, In meat Xercl mill ltaautlful Hesigns, at L. M. KLYNN'S BOOK STORE, Ne. 48 WKHT KINU STKKKT. 1881 1881 VALENTINES! ELEGANT STYLES, GREAT VARIETY. BOX VALENTINES, UNEQUALED. Call neil see AT HOOKSTOKb OK JOIN BIER'S SONS, 15 and 17 NORTH iJDSEN STRUCT, UANCAVJKK. FA. V1XIVARS, XV. II OUSKKKICriN'G COODS. FIINN & WILLSON weulil call the attention or their Irlemls and the public generally te their very large stock el COOK STOVES, RANUEK, PAKLOK STOVES AND HEATEKS, which embraces the fluent goeilsln the market, and our prices arc very low. In addition te our own make of Tin, Sheet Iren and Copper Ware, we have an Immense Hteclc of Reeds bought at New Yerk Auction, and we are Helling them much below their real value. In Tabic Cut tlery. Spoons, Weed and Willow Wareweliave always bargains. Ne one passes our Table and Fleer Cleths without admiring them. We have the largest stock of Stand Lamps, Library and Chandelier. in this city. Chimneys te lit all Lamps. Parties commencing housekeeping could net de better than e.xamlneeur stock lie fore purchasing. Ne charge for looking. FEINN & WILESON, Successors te Flinn ft ISrcncman, 152 N. Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa. SIGN OF THE TWO LARGE DOGS. Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Tin Hoeting and Spouting a specialty. All work dene by borough mechanics. COSrECTIOSS. "lONKECTIONS JUST- UKCKIVKO AT JOSEPH R. ROYBR'S WUOUSALK AND lUCTAIt. CONFECTIONERY, Xes.50 AND 62 TTEST KING STKEET. A Large Let of FKU1T, ORANGES, LEM ONS, Ac. Nw Large VIRGINIA PEANUTS en hand. AIargettek of Pura Confections, all of which will be sold te Merchant and Huck sters at the lowest market m.-. Try ROYER'S UNCLE SAM CANDY. Mail Orders promptly attended te. slSmd W
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