ek wtfKM tettiptite wzamn LANCASTER, PA., TUESDAY, MAT 10. 1881 Price TwCmU Feluie XYII-Ne. 214 czetMrtra. rrUILOBIMG AND OENTS' FURNISHING. JOHN FALCK, MERCHANT "TAILOR AND GENT3. FURNISHER, Ne. 44 West King Street. Having removed opposite from my old stand te the room occupied ler many ycare by the Lancaster Fire Inburance Company, I am new prepared te show my customers and the public a line of goods for the SPRING TRADE, which for quality, style and pi ice arc equal te any In the city. ., , , , , , A full line of Gents' Furnishing Goods al ways en hand. All goods warranted as represented and prices as low as the lowest. apr8-lmd&2mw JOHN FALCK. VTKW CLOTHING STORK. CHAS. A. HOHMANN liiaving Opened a CLOTHING STORE Ne. 154 North Queen St., (Hehinann's Old Stand), Nextdoeor te Flinn & Willsen'a Stere, i.s pre pared te make Clothing te Order at Short Netice and en reasonable terms. A complete assortment of Ready-Made Clothing of every variety constantly en hand and for sale at remarkably low prices. fapriVlmdAw s FltlNG CLOTHING. OUtt STOCK OF CLOTHING IS I.AUGKU FOK THE SKASOX THAN USUAL, and the advantage we" have an: buying in large quantities and Selling at Lewest Gash Prices, IIAYlNti HUT ONE 1'IIICE, se the poorest judge el goods gel-, as much ler his money as the most expert. UUK 10 ALL-WOOL SUITS FOK MEN Are worth your ccelng. AND OU5J CUSTOM DEPARTMENT IS FILLED WITH THE CHOICEST OF PATTEliys, Which we invite you te examine. WILLIAMSON & FOSTER, ONE-PRICE HOUSE, 36-38 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTKU. PA. S1 Fill NO OFKNING AT H. GERHART'S Hew TaMi MMii Ne. 6 East Kin? Street. i 1 have just completed titling up one et the Finest Tailoring Establishments te be leund In this state, and am new prepared te show my customers a stock of goods ter the SPRING TRADE, which for quality, style and vauety ei Patterns has never leen equaled in this city. 1 will keen and sell no goods which I cannot recommend te my customers, no matter hew low in price. All goods warranted as represented, and prices as low as the lowest, at Ne. 6 East King Street, Next Doer te the New Yerk Stere. H. GERHART. N1 KW STOCK OF CLOTHINU FOB SPRING 1881, . AT . D. B, Hostetter & Sen's, Ne. 24 CENTRE SQUARE. Having made unusual efforts te bring isferc the publicn line, stylish ami well madcx stock et REABT-1ADE CLOTHING, we arc new prepared te show them one et the most carefully selected stocks or clothing in this city, at the Lewest Cash Prices. MEN'S, BOYS' AMI YOUTHS' CLOTHING! IN GREAT VARIETY. Piece Goods et the Most Stylish Designs amd at prices within the reach et all. 4VOivc us a call . D. B. Hostetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE, e-iya LANCASTER. lA. DRY INENS. LINENS! We Lave received new linens from Belfast, Barnsley, Duntermline, Lisle, Brussels, Ghent, Silesia, Bohemia. We have ransacked all Europe for linens, and have a variety of both fabric and finish that could net be gathered in the American market. The goods are fresh, tee. That's important ; for linens bought in NiW Yerk may be several years old, and you knew starched linens de net improve by age. The dressings used by the manufacturers is net se de structive as starch ; but it docs injure the fabric in time. We have another advantage in prices. We gain the importer's profit. The result is we get the best linens in the world, in the best pessible condi tion, and for the least money anybody can get them for. We can give yen the importers' profit, and still have cueugh left. New it is proper for te consider that somobedy else may be doing the same thing, and afford the very same advantages. Se, if you please, whatever you wish te buy get samples of it from us and from ethers, and compare. Or buy our goods, if you like ; and if yen can 'de as well elsewhere, bring enrs back. This is rather a brave challenge ; for, you. kuew nobody wants lcmnauts. The linens new in are sheeting, pillow, bolster and shirting linens, towels, tewclings, doilies, napkins, table cloths and table linens. JOHN WANAMAKER, Chestnut, Thirteenth and Market Sts., PHILADELPHIA. f 1 ivlki:, newfcits uuksti SPECIAL BARGAINS OFFERING AT GIVLER, BOWERS & HURST'S, 25 EAST KING STREET, We offer Special Bargains in our Dress Goods Department. We offer Special Bargains in our Notion Department. We offer Special Bargains in our Demestic Department. We offer Special Bargains in our Carpet Department. We offer Special Bargains in our Merchant Tailoring Department LADIKS AND GENTLEMEN, we arc constantly receiving all the new season able goods that, the market aftbids. We consider it no trouble te show goods. We rather esteem it a pleasure for te have you call, thereby giving us an opportunity te show you the many bargains we aic offering. -:e:- GIVLER, BOWERS & HURST, 25 EAST KING STREET, TACOlt M. MARKS T OIIN A. CHARLES. :e: LAJtfE -ALL KINDS OF- Dry Goods Offered at Great Bargains, AT TUB OLI UKLIA1SLK STAND, Ne. 24 East King Street. SILK DEPAKTMKNT. Special Inducements In Mack and Colored Silks. The general DUESS GOODS DEPARTMENT constantly being added te ami. prices inArkcd down te promote quick sales. MOUHNINO noens DEPARTMENT complete in all Its details. CARPETINGS, QUKKXSWAKK AND GLASSWARE in immense variety ami ai very Lew Prices. DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT unsurpassed in quantity and quality, and goods in all Hie departments guaranteed te be what they are sold ler. 3Call ami see us. JACOIi M. MAKKS, JOHN A. 1'LVMHEJL'S TLUMItKK'S SUPPLIES. TLCMHKRS SUPPLIES. GAS FIXTURES, BEAUTIFUL DESKJXS ON EXHIBITION. Tarred Paper, The Only Meth Destroyer. WROUGHT IRON PIPE VERY CHEAP. Plumber's Supply Depot, Bath Tubs, Bath Boilers, Sinks. THE FULL DISCOUNT TO THE TRADE. JOHN" lT AENOLD, Nes. 11 & 13 EAST ORANGE IKON Z K . j:ON K1TTEKS. IRON BITTERS! A TRUE TONIC. IRON BITTERS arc highly recommended ter all diseases requiring 'a certain and effi cient tonic; especially INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OP APPE TITE, LOSS OP STRENGTH, LACK OP ENERGY, &c. It enriches the bleed, fdrcugtlicns the muscles, and gives new life te the nerves. It acts like a charm en the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as Ta.ithit the Feed, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, J fcarlbvrn, etc. The only Iren Preparation that will net ulacken the teeth or give headache. Sold hy all druggists. Write ter the A It C Boek, M pp. et useful and amusing read lug sent free. BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, liMyd&w BALTIMORE, MD. Fer Sale at OOHRAN'3 DRUG street, Lancaster. UOTJ2L8. w HLER HOUSe, (formerly Clarenden.! 113 and 115 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET ( below Chestnut),. l'lULADELriiiA, fa. On the Eutepean plan. Meals at all hours, at moderate rates. Reems, 80c., 73c. and $1 per day. Hetel open all night. ABEL M1SHLER & CO., Prep's, Formerly of the Misnler Heuse, Reading, Pa. liAitnr Stkwaiit, Supt,, , Formerly of the SL Clair, Atlantic Cit ml3iud GRAIN SPECULATION In large or small amounts. $25 or 920,000. Write W. T. SOULE ft CO., Commission Mer chants, 130 La Salle street, ChlcagOrlll., lor.clr ler.clr n'ars. .m28.lyd GOODS. L1S INENS. "IIYT.KR, UOWKKS & 1IUKST! LANCASTER, PA. teiin n. Ke-rn. & CO. CHARLES, JOHN 15. ROTH. SUJ'fLTES. STREET, LANCASTER, PA. fapr2-tld HITTERS. fRON IUTTERS. SURE APPETISER. STORE. 137 and 139 North Queen W QRTH SEEING THE DISPLAY OF NECKWEAR. SUSPENDERS AXD HAXDKERCIUEFS, AT E. J. ERISMANS, Ne. BO NORTH QUKB.N STREET, LANCASTER, PA. ILancastcr I-ntdligcmrr. TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 10, 1881. Editorial Correspondence of Istelliekxcxr. UP THE VALLEY. by cumheuland Jt shenandeah VALLEY KAILKOADS. A Trip te Luray Cave and Return. Luray is the county seat of Page county, Va., ami en the way te it Jenerson, Clarke and Warren counties arc successively passed through, all wedged in between the mountains. They are in the narrow limestone region of Virginia, a geed wheat growing and grazing ceuntiy. As you travel up the valley of course you get above the sea level, and Luray is probably six hundred feet above tide water, en the east or south fork of the Shenandoah, loekisig northward taMassanutten and en the ether sidotea broken and much-tossed line of the Blue Ridge, that rises and falls in waves Near te the depot is an im mense new frame structure that they tell you is a tannery, te be ruu by a Baltimore firm. Bark is plentiful en these mountain sides and the railroad has supplied the transpoitatien facilities. Over en the ether side of the railroad stakes are set, grading is going en, lumber is piled and foundation s! ones are heaped up in prep prep aiatien for a new hotel building, which the railroad company will erect for the visitors that arc expected te be attracted' here by the beauty of the scenery and te visit the rave. It will be three-stories high, and have accommo dations for :00 guests. It will overlook the Page valley, with its fatness, and take in from its site the rugged beauties of the surrounding mountains. A stone bridge spans the little riverat Luray, and the outside water wheel luri.s lazily. Luiay itself is a straggling, hilly town of 800 population, thin looking stores, a cou ple of dilapidated taverns, a court house en a cress sheet, and oflTte one side of the villege the negre settlement with a Bap tist and a Methodist chinch. When the brass band had marched the excursionists tlueugh the village and halted at the hotels, the little town was stirred te un wonted excitement. But the visitors were much nunc intensely moved by the an nouncement which met them that this was a local option town, that under the law the people of the corporation could vote ' no liquor' and the exclusion of its sale from within two miles of the line, aud that for four years this had been rigidly maintained. Neither threats, bcguilcmcnt, reproach upon Virginia hospitality, ap peals for the suffering or ridicule for the invasion of an Old Dominion town by the spirit of Puritanism could discover liquor in that place. Stable lifted up his veice against the mother of seven presidents all of whom he had voted for and de livered her ever, with imprecations, te Bid delburger and Maheue, but all te no avail, until Geerge Carpenter was chartered, the funning silver put in his hand and his nose pointed toward the mountain distillery for apple jack. It looked nunc like a Virginiatown when after the dinner, which is net a material part of this narrative, the vehicles were announced te convey the party te Luray cavern. They embraced nearly every kind from a fish wagon te a tally-he, but they answered their purpose admirably and by 2 o'clock p. in., the entire two hundred were gatheicd at the mouth of the cave. It is en a bleak hillside, three-qiiaiters of a mile southeast of Luray and several hundred feet above it. commanding a splendid outlook of the valley, and net hall" way te the summit of the hill. It was sonic time in the summer of 1878 when B. P. tftebhins and the two Camp bells, Andrew and AVilliam, prospecting around this country for caves, discovered the new famous Luray cavern and de termined te possess the land en which it was situate. That land, a tract of seme 18 acres, had some time previously been sold en a lien against one Burackcr and bought, in by his son-in-law, licidlcr, at 63 an acre. Under the.law of Virginia, however, land thus sold may be put up again at the guarantee of any ether than the purchaser te bid ten per cent, mere. The Campbells had it put up and bought it at 17 an acre. They then de veloped the. cave, made extensive explora tions anil impievemcnts, and boasted of having known of its value and wonders before they had it put up and struck down, and negotiated for the sale of it te the railroad company for about JO, 000. Then Bcidlcr attacked their title en the ground of fraud. He elfercd te compromise for a fourth interest, but they elfercd that fourth iutcrcst te their. lawyers te win the case and cave for them. They lest both, and the cenit confirmed Bcidler's title," and he has sold it te the railroad company for $37,500. Se a neighbor told us while the party was getting ready for the descent. The preparations all completed the two hun dred visitors and a host of guides and cu rious villagers, attracted by the news of free entrance, filed down a atone stairway for 50 feet between two walls of masonry, and wcie very seen in the grand entrance chamber, twenty feet high and eighty feet wide. Te one who has been at Mammoth cave the first consideration that suggests itself is a comparison of the two. The mouth of the Kentucky wonder, hke this, is en a hill side, but weeded where this is bare and with rocks, all about it suggestive of caves. The opening there is a cleft that leeks like the month of a cave and could net well be concealed, and after the passage down a flight of stairs a long tunnel is traversed before the main entrance cham ber is reached. That vestibule is a huge quarry covered with a rock ceiling and massive boulders arc strewn fantastically about. This entrance te Luray is very like an ordinary ccllarway or descent te a vault, with a two story building ever it for the shelter and accommodation of vis itors. Emerging fiein under a low arch way the view that bursts upon you is that of an elaborately decorated grotto, wrought with the delicate handi work of cunning artificers. In the first chambers you see at once the difference between Mammoth cave and this Luray cavern. The first leeks as if it was built by the Titans, the latter as if the fairies had adorned it. Fer many, many years the former has been a place of resort, but its management has cot in all that time displayed the taste and enterprise which the Luray people exhibit upon the occasion of every visitation by a considerable num ber of people. This consists in the loca tion, arrangement and instantaneous illum ination of 5,000 or 0,000 candies, set en the stalagmites and se distributed that they net only light up te view the weuders aud beauties of the interior, but glimmering among the stalactites and stalagmites themselves produce an illusion of enchant ment that greatly heightens the ordinary effect of the natural curiosities here exhib ited. Iticxtcntofceur.se Mammoth cave is a -most incomparably greater aud such general illumination is practi cally impossible. Of course Luray bids fair upon further development te dis close many new avenues and chambers and no adequate conception can yet be formed of its real extent, but at present a few hours trip will probably sufiicc te traverse its entire ronte'ef passage ways, while days will net take one through all the laid out paths of the Mammoth. Its im mense halls, long avenues, deep pits, navigable streams and mighty blocks of stone in monster shapes have no counter parts in Lu ray, but en the ether hand the vandalism that has se 'weil nigh robbed Mammoth cave of its greatest beauty in its stalactites, and stalagmites has been checked from the outset at Luray, and thcrc,is left there an exhibition that could net be excelled even if its rival had been left in all its pristine glory. It is an ad vantage that se much of this can be seen without the wearisome maiehes and toil some descents and climbing which make up the long route in the Kentucky cave; and for real beauty as much is exhibited in a few hours trip through Luray as can be seen in a day's travel through the ether. It would be tedious and utterly inadequate te convey a proper idea te attempt te fellow the guide en the routs through the avenues aud different chambers in detail. Nothing is se hard te give or get a conception of from mere word description as a cave. Luray is already better furnished with beard walks, stairways, substantial balus trades aud ample protection agaiust all possible dangers than Mammoth cave. With a pair of gum overshoes or thick thick selcd beets, the journey can be made free from dirt or dampness. The temperature is even at about 5S, aud the dripping is very slight. The thousands of candles and the caudelabras containing from ten te twenty-five candles each, hung in all the prominent places, greatly heighten the pictnrcsqnencss of the scenes and suggest the feasibility of the introduction with geed purpose of the electric light. Every ceiling almost is hung thick with stalactites, from the tiny white pipc-stem-like tcndiil te great folds of stone, that are curiously draped like the hangings ever an Oriental throne or ' Saracen's lent." Heie is a pillar, which they call Washington's 11x20 feet, that is a stalagmite formed by the drippings of hew many thousand years de you think? The "(lower garden" is a great mass of low stalagmites, (lower and star shaped. Passing up a stair way, te your left, en a led-e of rock, is hanging a row of stones that could net have been better imitations of salt mackerel liung up in bunches if they were cut out for that representation. Plute's chasm, a huge cleft 500 feet long and 75 feet deep, has a column stalagmite standing in it 10 feet high aud thick as a big tree. Skeleton Gerge is another chasm in which when the cave was lir.st found they discovered the bones of what was supposed te have been a middle aged person, Norseman or red man no one knew, nor who built in that cavern the fire which had smoked its reef nor left the ether organic remains which were there found. There arc veils and cascades of pure white alabaster and an "empress column " of white 70 feet high ; the "fallen column" is a huge stalactite like the trunk of a mighty tree that has been detached from the ceiling, and in falling caught where it new bangs ob liquely, contented by a mass a!, the small end te the ether pendants and closely re sembling the huge butt of a tree as you see them fallen aud caught in the descent in a decaying forest. The " angel's wing" is a white pendant, resembling the object whose name it bears, though the most cu rious shapes taken by the pendants arc the.se. of drapery. The iron h;w given them a rich brown color, and as' they hang in curious curves they leek exactly like heavy folded cm tains. This device appears again and again in endless variety and iu many colors, formed by the degrees of lime, magnesia or iron which compose them. Seme of thcin arc ttansparcnt, and when a light is placed behind them exhibit a wonderful richness and delicacy of color. Anether curious elfect of these pendants is the tone given forth when they are struck, and in one place seme twenty of them, hanging iu a row, of va rious sizes anil mostly tubular, can with a wooden hammer be played upon like an organ. One of the larger stalagmites is called " the Tower of Babel " from its resemblance te the well-known pictures of that structure, but there arc fully twenty which fairly suggest this idea, run ning from ten te twenty-live feet iu height and all curiously carved as it seems. Giant's Hall leeks as if it was crowded with gigantic figures and with candles placed upon them the massive stalagmites could easily be imagined as se many ghostly Titans, lamp bearers in a nether world. The Ball Roem is a spacious chambar, away in the re cesses of the cave, a mile or two from the entrance and two hundred and sixty feet below the surface. It is laid with a plat form big enough for a picnic party te dance en it and with Heats for a hundred people ; two or three chandeliers furnish ample light artd the statuary is as numer eusas it is beautiful and grotesque. Near by is a fountain with fully a barrel of crystal clear water in it, and the formation holding it is a perfect rosy-lipped scaihelL Up fifty steps the tourist reaches Camp bell's hall, anether chamber of dazzling beauty, aud en the ether side of the ball room is an unexplored gallery which is full of premiso te these developing the resources of the cave. On the way thither a curious formation was discovered, a circular peel of water, very like a bird's nest, with three round white pebbles closely resembling bird eggs. The nest was left undisturbed. Over and ever you come across pure white and chocolate colored stalagmites that leek like iust Mether Gruel's moulds of iee cream. These things are net a tithe of the beauties and won der of Luray cavern. There are enough there te quicken the activity of the scien tist, te furnish snbjects for the artist or theme for the poet's fantasy ; but the or dinary traveler who simply gees te see wonders and beauty is amply recompensed. Uc forgets that this is the work of nature, until chamber after chamber, with their hundreds of thousands of pillars, fountains, carved and fluted columns, bridges, stat ues, bridges, tapestry in stone, reliefs and multiform decorations arc discovered, he recognizes hew far beyond the conception of man or his skill te realise these wonders in stone, is the interior of Luray cavern. On the return trip, as we nearcd the outer chambers, great was our astonish ment te see ene of the chocolate-colored statuesque stalagmites meve toward the van guard of the excursionists, and with frantic gestures and shufiling attitude extend a bag that looked as if it might contain a jug. It was Geerge Carpenter, of color, who faithful te his trust had brought his half gallon of apple jack and had daited past the guard at the cavern's mouth, en the plea el" urgent necessity te minister te extreme wants of the subterra nean wanderers. Geerge was a Methodist but at the outside " Aunt July," who had a liltl'J cake stand set up for the day, was a Baptist and cheerfully sold her lemonade water te mix with that refreshing moun tain dew, aud nobody asked whether ihe revenue lax iiad been paid. But Gcerge pledged his honor that befere the distiller would sell him less than a gallon he had " taken oath and writ his name iu a book" te conic fcr the ether hairgalleu before the twelvemonth passed, aud he was supplied with the means te get it and send it te Stable, if he couldn't use it himself. With increased aud well-ordered hotel accommodations for visitors te Luray and a line of coaches at reasonable hire from there te the cavern, liberal excursion rates en the railroad ought te make it a place' of popular resort. A week among these Yneuulains, by that beautiful river and in that historic valley would be a worthy part of any summer pregramme ; and, for these who have shorter time te stay, easy excursions from points net farther oft" than this city might be arranged te take the trip ever there en the afternoon of seme day, spend the night at the hotel, next morning at the cavern and- leturn by 8 p. m. the succeeding evening. W. U. II. UALI.OT HOX STIIFIKIW. Ne Limitation for Electoral Thieves. At the election of November, 1877, A. W. Schalck aud W. J. Whitcheuse were cendidates for district attorney of Schuyl kill county; the former was returned elected and entered upon the duties of his office, but Whitcheuse contested his elec tion and a vast amount of testimony was taken befere an examiner. This testimony showed pretty clearly that giess frauds had been perpetrated at one pell iu Schalck's interest, and the examiner, when he presented his report te the ceuit, October i:J, 1879 enIy twenty-four days before the expiration of the two years given as the limit in which a criminal prosecution may be brought,) lccemmcndcd that the perpetrators of the fiaud be indicted. Pursuant te this re commendation the court referred the mat ter te Schalck, who was in the full exer cise of the duties of district attorney, but at the expiration of two weeks, he having done nothing in the matter, Whitcheuse, the contestant, had indictments pre pared by private counsel, which were submitted te Schalck for his signature previous te sending them te the grand jury. Schlaek, however, refused te sign tlicm, whereupon the .court ap pointed Whitcheuse's counsel special dis trict attorney te try these cases. .He sent the indictments te the grand jury, which found a true bill in each cese. The defen dants, however, moved te quash the in dictments, first because they wcie net signed by the district ; secondly, because the offenses complained of were in dictable only under the election cede act of 1839, which provides that all indictments drawn ' under its previsions must be brought within one year, se mat in tins case we prosecutions would be barred by limitation. This view the lower court coincided in and uaashed the indictments. Frem this demon a writ of error was taken te the supreme court, which, in an opinion by Justice Paxson, reverses the judgment of the lower court aud orders that the prosecu tions be continued. Justice Paxson holds that the indictments were net drawn under the act of 1839 aud continues : " It must be conceded that offenses which strike at the purity and fairness of elections are el a grave character. Are they indictable at the common law '. This is a serious and at the same time comparatively new ques tion. In considering it we have little in the way of authority tb guide us. It was assumed by the learned counsel for the de fendants that an indictment will net lie at common law for such acts, they arguing that offenses against the election laws are unknown te the common law ; ' they are purely and exclusively of statutory origin.' What is a common law offense?" His honor then quotes from Blackstone, Bishop and Wharten, and cites two cases in Massachusetts where it was held that every qualified voter possessed the statu tory right te vote, and any act tending te disturb or unlawfully abridge that right was punishable at common law. After declaring that the signing or the bills by the special district attorney was regular Justice Paxson concludes as fel- lows t We are of opinion that all such crimes as especially aflect public society are in dictable at common law. The test is uet whether i'r,-cedents canle found in the books, but whether they injuriously affect the public policy and economy. 'It seeds no argument .te show that the acts charged in these indictments are of this character. They are net "only offenses which affect public society, but they affect it in the gravest manner. An offense against the freedom and purity of elections is serine against the nation. It strikes at the foun dations of republican institutions. Its tendency is te prevent the expression of the will of the people in the choice of rulers and te weaken the public coafl ceafl coafl deBce in elections. When this confidence is once destroyed the end of popular cer ernment is net distant. Surely if a woman's tengue can se far affect the geed of the society as te demand her punish ment as a common scold, an offense which involves the right of a free peeplp te cheese their own rulers in the maimer pointed out by law is net beneath the dig nity of the common law nor beneath its power te pnnish. The one is an annoy ance te a small portion of the btx'y politic the ether shakes the social fabric te its foundation. "We are of opinion that the offenses charged in these indictments are crimes at common law. We regard the principle thus announced as net only sound but salutary. The ingenuity of politicians is such that offenses agaiust the purity of elections arc constantly liable te occur, which are net specifically covered by statute. It would be a reproach te the law were it powerless te punish them. It fellows from what litis been said that it was error te quash the indictments. The judgment is reversed in each ease and a procedende awarded." Who would threw away hard earned nieuey for every new etmli syrup advertised : when you can preenrn that .standard remedy for cough. Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup, l'riee en. a bottle. Toe Hasty. Hasty persons drink the neelar el existence sraidiuK het, uml when they puller the pangs of dyspepsia, or indirection with its kindred evils, nethjii; will se seen ami he cnYetimlly help them us Uurdeck liltMsl Hitters, l'riee $1. trial size III cents. Fer "lie at II. 15. Coch ran's Drag Stere, i:!7 North IJueen street. Oult Chewing Tobacco. Sir. Churchill, machinist, Kultale, S. Y., writes : " Frent some cause, ' I laid it te cliow cliew injj tobacco,' I lest llesh considerably, and felt se badly that I resolved te leave it oil' and try Uurdeclc Meed IHttcr.s ; since doing e 1 have rained steadily, and in a few days hope te kick the lieam' at niv usual weight." fur s'Ueat II. IS. Cochran's lrii- Stere, l.'7 North Queen street. Nearly a Miracle, K. Asenilh ifnll. ltinghninten. N. Y writes) "1 sufl'cretl for several months with a dul pain through left lung and shoulders. 1 lest iny spirits. upctite anil color, and could with dilliculty keep up nil day. Aly mother pro cured ynmc llurileck ISIoed Hitters: I took them us directed, and Iiave felt no pain since tint week after using them, and am new quite well." Fer sale at IJ. H. Cochrane Drug Stere, 137 Nertli (Juccii street. rAVXRHAXUlXllH, fr. w INllOW SHADE.?, &V. 200 WINDOW SBADES in a variety of Celers, that will bu sold from forty te seventy-live cents a piece. Thin is about half value ter them. A few of these light patterns left, iu order te close, will be sold at seventy-live cents a piece. l'lain Shading for Windows in nil t lie newest colors, and in any desired quality wanted, la inch, -l. inch and 11 inch r large windows and Stere Shade." SCOTCn HOLLANDS, the iKvt goeils made, American Hollands in assortment. Measure of windows taken, esti mates made aud Shades hung in a satisfactory manner. Of WALLPAPERS we are prepared te suit, everybody. Our line is larger, choicer and clic:icrtliaii imy season heretofore, (.lit Palters irem the chciipcsl grade te the finest geed made, Grounded and Common Papers in such a line variety that we can suit the most fastidious. Cornice's anil Curtain 1'eles, Window 1':imts, Ac. Or ders taken ler Fine Mirror.-'. PHAEES W. FRY, NO. 57 NOKTII 4JIJKKN ST. HOUKM ANJ STATION KKY. -VTKW Al UHOICr: STATIONERY, NEW BOOKS AND MAGAZINES, AT L. M. FLYNNS, Ne. 43 WKMT KINCS STKKKT. I..NK HOOKS. JOHN BAER'S SOUS, 15 aad 17 NORTH WEEN STREET, LANCASTER, fil., Have ler sale, at Ike Lewest Prices, BLANK BOOKS, Comprising Day Heek", Ledgers, Cash Heeks, Sales Heeks, Hill Heeks. Minute Heeks, Ke eeipt Heeks, Memorandum, Copying Heeks, Pass Hnekss, Invoice Heeks, Ac. WRITING PAPERS. FoeNcap, l.ettc.i. Nete. Hill, Sermon, Counting Heuse, Drawing Papers, Papeteries, Ac. KNVKI.OPKS AXD STATION KK V el all kinds, Wholesale and Ueluil. FAMILY AND TEACHERS' BIBLES, Prayer Heeks, Devotional Heeks, Sunday school Music Jtoeks, .Sunday-school Libraries. Commentaries. Ae. J-'OB NALJt. ?OK KENT. TIIKKK At'ICKS OF I.AND r In the Kighth Ward. Apply te 1C J. lit HOUSTON. 2M 2f, Centre: Square. HAKNKStf FOKMALK CnKAF. A GOOD Single Set et Harness for sale cheap. In nsc but uHhert, time: geed as new. Apply te D. M.STAUFFKlt, inK-tld ? Nertli Queen Street. MISCKLANtSOVH. WATKK KKNT NOTICK. T1IK WATtB Kent Duplicate Is new in the hand et the Treasurer, and en ami after te-morrow. April H, Water Kent will he received, and live per cent, allowed for prompt payment. Ofl'ee hours ireui s te 12a. in. and from 1 te 5 p. m. WM. McCOMSKT, :U!7-tfd Treasurer and ltccelver of Taxes. BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED TO I . M.. MAY 27, at the Banking Heuse or D. IV Lechor A Sen, ter twenty registered bends of $300 each, or any part thereof, te be Issued by the Lancaster City Scheel Heard, bearing 4 per cent. Interest, payable quarterly. The, bends will be dated .Innc I, 1H. and payable at the pieesare of -Jg-gr EnvA Chairman Finance Cem. Scheel Beard. in9-2td CHrLANDH UKSTAUKANT. AVINU engaged the services or a 11 rat-class Kes titnrant Cook, I am new prepared te serve articles -In -iny line at short notice, such as Chicken Croquettes, Chicken Salad. Fried Oysters, Terrapin, and all delicacies found in season, tour patronage is respectfully solicited. JOHN COPL.AND, Ne. 125 Nertli Qiwu Street. P. S. Weddings ami parties rveil at reasonable rates. ' f JlUAStfd