i v rf - tfi (Efye XmtateK) "OH tUM; ''& 1?l 1 Volume XVIlI-Ne. 0. LANCASTER, PA., SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1881. Price Twe Cent. k f VLOTlllXU. T M1K BUSINESS OF SELLING CLOTHING AT Has crown te its OAK HALL these points are present greatness 1ecause faithfully observed : ILanrastcr Jntclligntcrr. SATURDAY KVKN1NO, "SEPT. 10, 1881. Mount Desert. IN MAKING. Te Get the Eest Material. Te Spenge it Properly. Te Cnt it Fashionably. Te Sew it Thoroughly. Thu Stock-fit MKX'S CLOTHING IN SELLING. Te Get the Cash. Te Have One Price. Te Pay Back Meney if Unsuited. Te Guarantee the Goods. fiiii In UOY.V CLOTHING til Houst; in tliu Country. A cordial welcome is ready Mil lulled in cvciy ie-.pccl. ilways keit very lull In assortment, even te the Style anil Trimmings arc net appi eaehed by any Clothing ler all who t ente, anil we expect te sell only when people ate WAMAKER & BROWN, OAK HALL, Sixth and Market Sts., PHILADELPHIA. THE LA ltd EST VIMT11INU HOUSE IN AMEltWA. R OKKNSTKIN'S ONK I'KICH IIOUSH. JiO.SKNVTKIN'.S ONK l'KICK 1IOUSK. AL. ROSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, NO. M NORTH QUEEN STREET. -:e:- SPECIAL OFFERING FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY. IN H:UKIt TO l 'LOSE OUT MY KNTIItK STOCK OK BOYS' TJITS I have i.'duecil them -!" pe: the window. cent, below the OKIGINAL COST. Nete the. I'l ice as marked in Children'fl Suits from Beys' Scheel Suits from Suits te Fit Heys from 19, te 16 years. . . .$1.50 up. ..$2.00 up. .$3.00 up. Ser.iivachtiieeuill net lie eileteil seen strain. Call early and get a geed choice. AL. ROSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE HOUSE. C CLOTHING! a- OTIIINGt MYERS & RATHFOM. The LAKCEST CLOTHING IIOUSK lire ellc ring our hteck e! IN TIIK STATE OUTSIDE OF PHILADELPHIA. We Spring and Summer Goods If von want a Heady you kiii flint no better the prices are .se low that At reduced price, in order te make room ler our coming Fall Sleck. Alaile Suit you can In-sillied tern very small aiiiuuulet money. It you pre'er being measured ami having a Suii maile te order stock te H.'leet lieiu ami at such prices as will astonish you Indeed no one ueeil go alieut in a aliahhv Mill 1 licse. tlavs. .luit think el it, we can luriiNli you with COAT, PANTS AND TEST te keep cool in, for the the t-noiiiieiis amount or THUKE DOLLARS. Yes, ler a man le wear ami a hitman tee. Call and m-u and be Miilcd and ave money. We employ the best experi enccil Cultc is. mi. I e can guarantee s-itisfaelieu in every particular. MYERS & RATHFON. CENTRE HALL, Se. 12 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER, PENN'A. e.v jtrrriMs. TKON lUTTKItH TKON IMTTHKS. IRON BITTERS! A TB0E TONIC. IKON KIT-THUS arc liiglily.Yce.iiiiiiieiuled ler dent tonic; especially SURE APPETISER. nil diseases requiring a reilain anil efll- INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA. INTEKMITTKNT FEVERS, WANT OF APPE TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY, &c. ... It1clic"Ml"olleoil.!,lri-iiKlht!n.stheiiitiscle1Jiiiil8jlve'jncwlileto the nerves. It acts i ? cJ'yj'V"1 Vlu S,M'-lVv,l?,f;i'" ,;',,,1(,vi"" !,M ''.V.-peptic symptoms, such as Taming the Feed, llctchnuj, J lent in the Memttet, Heartburn, etc. Tlie only Iren reparation that will net blacken tlietellierKiw headache. Sel.l l.y all dnigRiBt.s. Write ler the A 15 C Boek. 32 pp. et useful an.l amusing icaillur sent fret: BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, l2.Myil.tw Fer Sale at COCHRAN'S DRUG street, Lancaster. BALTIMORE, MD. STORE, 137 and 139 North Queen KUOFIKU, ,'. w ATEKS AND 1CANGICS. r N HOOFS KKPAIKICD AND PAINTED. JOHN L. AKNOLD, -CONTIIACTOK FOK- Slate Rooting, tal Reefing, Tin Rooting, PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING. -:e:- Nea. 11, 13 & 15 EAST ORANGE STREET, LANCASTER, PA. niprS-tfd irtxtss ani lAijvejis. S. CLAY MILLER, Wmes. Brandies. tlius.Old Hye ffliiskies. &c. Ne. 33 PEM SQUARE, LANCASTER, PA. GIBSON'S WHISKY BOTTLED AZ .SPECIALTY, A Summer Kesert Combining the Pleasures et Seaside and Mountain Correspondence or the Intelligence!:. ISar IIariier, AIerNT DcsHnT, Maine, ) September;, 18SI. $ Ne doubt there arc few readers of the IxTKLLicsizscEit who have net heard mere or less of Mount Desert, and it is hoped that a hi icf letter from here may prove interesting te all these who have had the geed fortune te visit this favored isle will never tire hearing of its loveliness, and these te whom it. is as yet terra incognita may dream of the pleasures in store for them. The Island of Mount Desert is en the coast of Maine one hundred and ten miles east of Portland and mav he reached by steamer from that city or ficnn Uecklaml, or by stage from Ranger. We took the lat ter and when near the town of Ellswerth, twenty-two miles away, caught the first glimpse of 'The ffi-.iy anil tlmntlcr-sniillen pile Which marks alar the Desert I.sle." Each subsequent turn of the read re vcalcd new beauties of sea and mountain, and as we came nearer and nearer and the clouds thickened and lowered, and finally enveloped the mountain tops, and threw dark shadows en the waves beneath, the scene was one of surpassing gtauduer. liar Harber, the principal and most pop ular resort, is en Frenchman's Uay, en the northeast hide of I lie island. Here are some half-de.eu bete! and a large num ber of cottages ; and here from July until late in September may be found hundreds of people sceking health and recreation.. Our stay was no cesarily brief, but long enough te cuable us te make hasty visits te seme of the beauties of the island. It is net my purpose te describe any of the different points, for it is the peculiar charm of Mount Desert that it does net depend upon the attractions of any one place, or upon any particular pleasure, for its reputation as a most inviting resort, out upon its general and universal beaut', anil the great variety of its pleasures. Schooner and Great Heads. Otter Clill, the Ovens, Eagle Lake, the beautiful panorama from the summit of Green Mountain, the many sails en the bay and the visits te islands in the neighborhood, might be described at great length without giving the reader clear idea of their beauty ; my only desire is te point out in briefest words the great claims ofthe plnccas a summer resort. As such it is in many respects the most delightful I knew of, and this is written after oue or mere visits te Lake Geerge, the White mountains, the C'atskills, and ether places justly renowned for their beauty. Heie alone is found that rare combination of .sea shore and mountains that cannot be described and must be seen and felt te be appreciated. Here mere than anywhere else may be found net only a great variety of scenery, but a great variety of pleasure and occupation. Other places give geed fishing or gunning, yraml views or pleas ant drives, but here the visitor has almost everything Unit can tempt the seeker for health or leereatieu, that can relieve the weary mind or body and send him home with fresh vigor for the work of life. He can lish in brook, lake, bay or ocean ; walk, ride tr drive en the best and most beautiful of mountain reads, bury himself in the deptlt of the forest, or climb te the loftiest mountain peaks, gun for game both great and small, row en the lakes, sail en the smooth besom of the bay or en the billows of the sea, and go where he will by water or by land he must find something te please tins eye, te charm the car, te rest the body, te elevate thc-mind it may be the ocean's vast expanse, some lone lake or island, the music el some little water-lull out turn where he will the Rccne will be ene of loveliness and grandeur, and go where he will the air will be cool, pure and invigor ating. During my stay of four days I was net out without a light overcoat and each day the open weed (he gave a warmth that was pleasant indoors. Always the air was balmy and soft, ami even when the fog covered the mountain and isles and descended like rain the air was net chilly and piercing as we have it in lower latitudes. This is truly " An islan.l lull el hills Kml tit 11--. All rumpled ami uneven, Willi green recesses, smhlcn swells, Ami otlerous valleys tlriven : Se tleep mill straight, that always there The wiinl Iscratllcil te soil air." The eldest of- the large hotels at Bar Harber lias been built but seven years, and the great popularity of the place dates from that tiine. It is yet in its infancy, but that it is destined iu the near future te. become one ofthe leading resorts of the country cannot be doubted. Fashion can never destroy it, as it has ether places, for every point is beautiful, and whatever bad taste and ostentatious wealth may de te rob it of its charms, taste, comfeit and pleasure must some semo some whero reign supreme. Nowhere have I aecu se many healthy people or se many who thoughtfully enjoyed themselves old aud young enter into the spirit of the place and all is pleasure aud comfort. The languid inanimate bclle who travels with her half dozen trunks and her scores q dresses, who would rule at Saratoga aud Leng Branch, and the exquisite who can de naught but dress and lounge about, would here find their occupations gene and would pass the season unnoticed. I finish this letter en the steamboat en route for Rockland, which we are new ap proaching we left Bar Harber at 8:30. All passing the many beautiful islands in the bay, Schooner Head, Great Head, Otte Cliff, Seme's Sound, stepping for a few moments at Southwest Harber, popular rying with us recollections which in the quiet of home or the bustle of life " menu ery will net willingly let die." C. A. L. . The Ride. years Muzzle-Leaders te the Frent. We clip the following interesting article by II. W. Merrill, of New Rechelle, N. Y., en rilles from the Chicago Field. Mr. Mer rill was graduated at West Point iu 1838, served in the Flerida aud Mexican wars aud was in Texas and Kansas seven fighting Indians : Editors Amekicax Field : There is no use iu disguising tbe fact that after many years of thorough trial, the breech breech leading rille docs net give perfect satis faction as a sheeting gun, and that thou sands of old hunters who have tested them new prefer the old-fashioned muzzle muzzle leader, with its round patched ball, te any breech-leader using the long, or slug, hunting bullet, which has yet been invent cd. I mean for ranges up te 100 yards, and this is as far as it is generally wise te sheet at game while hunting. Netice this fact. The following extracts from a private letter, wiittcn by a highly educated gon gen gon tleman, an attorney at law and a fluent writer, dated Bake Charles, Calcasieu Par ish, La., speaks for itself. It is se full of the common sentiment en muzzle-leaders as well as of ether sporting sentiments, that I am induced te copy lrem it for the interest et your many readers. He says : " - I was born in Schenectady, N. Y and resided there, and in Madisen and Jeffersen counties until 1S.T3, when, at the age of nineteen, I came te Louisiana, where I have resided ever since nearly twenty-seven years. Inheriting from my father a fondness for hunting, and particularly for rifle sheeting and being new dissatisfied with breoel: breeel: breoel: Ieading rilles, I have been trying recently te procure a geed, sccend-haud muzzle muzzle leading rille. It is impossible te ct ene made te order, as I find, ou inquiring at New Yerk city, and from a friend at Watcrtewn, Jeffersen county, N. Y., that they are no longer manufactured' breech leaders having supplanted them. I find the sight of breech leadcis tee coarse, and the recoil tee great, te admit of close sheeting at short ranges. As you are aware from your experience in Texas.deer can easily be approached in our Southern weeds, and, except en the prairies it is rarely uecessary te sheet one at a greater distance thau ei;htv vards." This is his experience and it is but mine it is simple, plain, matter-of-fact common sense. He continues : "The impunged Amer ican muzz'e-leadinritle, made twenty and Unity years age in the Northern states, s':et with great ferce and accuracy (with a conical ball) up te 400 yards, and with the same charge of powder was as true at twenty yards as at any greater distance. While living at Watcrtewn, N. Y., I was well acquainted with a truusmith there. named Stevens, whose rilles acquired con siderable reputation iu Northern New Yerk, and I have shot them often, but he is dead." Yes, he made very accurate sheeting rilles, and se did many ethers, splendid hunting rifles, and we find nene new se constantly accurate. He continues : " I am getting along in years, was never very strong, aud wish te get a rille of net less than 44-100 calibre, as light as possible, say from 7? te 8V lbs. I wish one with set triggers, old fashioned crotch sights, and the bead or muzzle sight te be of coin silver. I wish bullet moulds for round ami conical balls, and a swage for perfecting the conical balls, a ball starter for starting the conical balls, and (though this is unimportant) would like te have an extra set of sights, includ ing a peep and glebe sight for long range target" practice. I would greatly prefer one perfectly plain, with out any bright ornaments or mount ings. "' "" " All of the above agrees with my senti ments, and it is but the language of plain, practical wisdom. Such a rifle he will probably get for $30, and then with pow der, lead and caps he is net dependent upon any city for his ammunition. This is a great blessing indeed when hunting far away. He continues : " Our close season for deer ends en the 3 1st inst. (July), and I am anxious te get a rille be bo be fere that date." Thus cnd3his letter Ne. 1, and I, being unable te find such a title as I knew he wanted, referred him te Henry E. Lcman, fc Ce. Laucastcr, Pa., an old linn in the making of muzzle-leaders, ami from whom I ordered a muzzle-leader four ycais age ler my son ; and this, alter testing the long range rille with the slug ball for ever thirty-five years, or since 1843, as a limit ing rille. In his second letter he says : "I am determined te order a lille from Mr. Leman, but as I cannot get it in time for my aunual camp hunt, commencing en the first of August, I may net send the order until I hear from him agaiti. I consider myself fortunate, when the open season for deer begius. en the first of August, if I can then spend about two weeks in the pitie weeds, camping out with some of my friends from town and country. " Bears, deer and turkeys arc yet abundant iu Calcasieu Parish. The Calcasican river, bread and very deep, and emptying into the Gulf of Mexico, runs nearly through the oentro of the parish. East of the Calcasieu river the time and thus prevented an early reply. Certainly the muzzle-leader will always have its warm friends, if it does net come pre-eminently te tne front again, as a hunt ing ride. Fer constant, steadii shoetimr. and with the round ball, I am fully satisfied, and have been for these last twenty-five years, that the muzzlo-leader will give superior sheeting te -the breech-leader for short ranges. I speak void of all interests in the matter. Ma.t. II. W. MEitKTi.r.. CLOTIIISti. country is nearly all prairie ; west of the river it is nearly all pine weeds. The weeds are scoured "by Greeks, flowing into the Calcasieu river en the cast, or into the Sabine river en the west ; the Sabine river divides Louisiana from Texas. " On the prairies are found the pinnated grouse, or prairie chicken (Tetrae cupide), snipe (chietly Scalopex miner), myriads of wild fowls of all kinds, in the fall and winter, aud a few ether game birds. In the weeds are found bear (chiefly in the cane brakes of the Sabine river swamp), dcer, turkeys, wild cats, squirrels, rab bits, partridges (quails), woodcocks, etc., etc. " Iu another letter he says : " I have just returned from a thrce days hunt.- I shot a neble buck aud several ethers were seen. I am going out again in a short time, I am confident that one or two of my friends will send an order te Lcman, and I will suggest te him that, as thousands of deer hunters in the Seuth prefer muzzle te breech-leading rifles, it may be greatly te his interest te advertise." Se writes an old, tried hunter, who is new using a breech-leader, and se feel the " thousands of ethers " of whom he speaks, and who prefer the muzzle-leader. Such language is very ominous and teaches a lessen we cannot frown down if we would. They are all only interested in with sportsmen in search of deer aud ether! procuring the best kind of hunting rifle, iiuu iii Lei- luug trial buujr euiue uesk iu iuu old muzzle leader of our fathers. In the meantime Mr. Lcman offers his excuse te me, for want of promptness in replying te a letter of mine, that it is " ewinc te the Leng will we remember the four delight- receipt of large orders for his rifles," etc., ful days spent amid its beauties, ever car- attentiea which has cceupied all his large game and Deer Island famous for its granite quarries. Soen we shall land. The mountains are growing dimmer and mere distant. Farewell te iVIeunt Desert. Murder of Judge Harden. A Scantlal that was Dragged into the Ma sonic Order ana Inte l'elitlcs anil out or which Grew Many feuds which Siill Kxist. The trial of W. II. Cochran, of Grand Rapids, Wisconsin, en a charge of mur dering Judge Haydcu, of Weed county. has been begun in Neilsville. The fact that both the slayer and his victim were men of public importance, possessing great wealth and standing well throughout the Northwest, socially, politi cally aud financially, will make the trial ene of net only local but of national interest. The story or the crime with which Cochran is charged is one of romantic interest. It was committed iu October, 1870. Judge Ilayden was a handsome, dashing man, about 40 years old, and had a wife and two interesting children. At the time he was killed he was judge of Weed coun ty, and made his home in Ccntralia,a little village acrass the river from Grand Kapids, where Cochran was engaged in the bank ing business. Ilayden was a candidate for attorney general of Wisconsin the year he was killed, and had held various offices of honor and trust. He served as a soldier through the rebellion with distinction, and before the war had been a leading lawyer of Caldwell county, Missouri. He was a Free Masen, high in the ranks of the. order, and out of the murder grew ene of the most complicated cases that was ever before any secret soeiety. W. II. Cochran is a native of Eastern New Yerk. He, tee, served two or three years in the .umyduriiur the rebellion. and had previously held various clerkships in the war department hi Washington. Fer a half dozen years previous te 1879 Cochran had been elc of the largest stock holders iu and cashier of the First na tional bank of Grand Hapids, and he ewiicd the most beautiful residence in town. His wife, a native or Glen's Falls, N. Y., was a young woman of exceptional beauty, and the Cechrau home was con sidered the greatest place of entertainment in the whole surreiindiur country. Her husband fSirly worshiped her, and grati fied her every wish. Judge Ilayden and Cochran were very intimate friends. Ilayden, unfortunately, had a frivolous habit of saying things that made him unpopular with a class of peo ple about his home, but Cochran always stuck te him, and their friendship was considered something unusual. In the early part of 1870 it began te be gossiped about the two villages that Judge Ilayden who w;is very frequently at the Cochran mansion, was tee intimate with the pro prietor's young wife. This talk reached Cochran, but he at first refused te listen te any such thing. In June Mrs. Cochran went te New Yerk en a visit, and a few weeks after her departure her husband in tercepted a letter she hail written, and was horrified at its disclosures. It was couch ed in the most affectionate terms, and from its contents there was net a shadow of a doubt. The man was fairly beside him. self with rage aud grief, aud en searching his wife's boudoir unearthed a large num ber of gushing epistles that had passed between his faithless spouse and his most intimate friend. Mrs. Cochran was sent for, and was at once confronted with tiic proofs of her guilt. She made a complete confession, and said that Haydcn's deli cate flattery had tut tied her head. With her nine-year-old daughter the woman left her home, and has since lived in the village with relatives. The scandal was at. once taken up by the people at large, and out of it many fueds have grown ami yet exist. Cochran decided- te bear manfully his grief and net molest Iiayden. Charges were prcfericd against Ilayden, am! he was expelled from the home ledge by the Masens. The matter was taken te the state grand ledge, and after two years of wrangling lue grand ledge at its last sit ting annulled the expulsion. The scandal was also dragged into politics, and the ex citement in the northern part of the state seemed te increase ever it daily. Along toward September, during the heal of the campaign, Ilayden purchased a small newspaper, the Ccntralia Kutajmse, and this only tended te intensify the fccliiiir. Ilayden, emboldened by Cochran's silence, began attacking him iu his paper, and it was kept tip until October. Nearly every body sided with Cochran, but Ilayden had many supporters who backed him iu all or his movements Finally a rcfcrcnce was made te the scandal by Ilayden iu his paper, and this seemed te be the straw that broke the camel's back iu Cech- ran s case, no immediately purchased a shotgun, and, leading it heavily, started out te kill Ilayden. Meeting him in ene or the principal streets or Ccntralia, he shot him dead jn his tracks without a- word or warning. He then gave himself up te the authorities. The excitement ever the murder was se great that a mob formed and had net Cochran's friends turned out and reinforced the officials, he would have been lynched the first night or his incar ceration. The next day he was released en $10,000 bail ; and owing te the inability te get judge, counsel or jury, the trial has been postponed from time te time until new. Eminent counsel have been retained en both sides and the trial will be hotly contested. Since the murder several newspaper offices and ether property in Ccntralia have been destroyed by the dif ferent factions, in retaliation for things that grew out of the crime. WE COMMENCE THE FALL SEASON OF '81 WITU FULL LINKS OF READY-MADE CLOTHHG, COMPRISING EVKKY l'OSSIULK VARIETY OK Cassimerc Suits, Business Knits, Workingmen's Suits, Diagonal Suits, Full Dress Suits. Pants and Vests Matched, Fine Doeskin Pants, Werkiiigmeifs Pants, Coarse and Fine Pants, Fall Overcoats. Positively all New anil Fie'h Ceeds at Lewest Prices. Ledger Building, A. C. YATES & CO., fenestaut 7 AND PHILADELPHIA. AND . i Sixth. scptl-lnul I.ZYEHY HT.1Ht.IS. yui ST-CLASs LIVEKV STAULK. "EUKST-L'LASS l.lVKKV STAHI.K. HOUGHTON'S EIRST-CLASS IIVERY STABLE! :e:- Five First-Class New Omnibuses te Hire at Lew Rates, for Private, Public & Sunday Scheel Picnics. -ALSO- First-Class Driving Horses, Buggies and Phaetons te Hire, at Ne. 221 NORTH QUEEN STREET, 3-KOKMEi:i.Y 7.KCIlKU.lIKO.S'OLI LIVKUY STAND. IIOUSU JfUitStSHtHU UOOHS. jJOUSKKIIKMSIIIKG CJOO.W. TTOUSKFUKNISIIlNO liOODS. FLIiYiN" & WILLSOJST, SUCCESSORS TO FL1NN & MIENEJTAN, Have new ou liaml the Largest ami Most Complete Stock et HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS Fl IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. or Oil cielli ilc. :i yam. Table Cutlery, ISttckets 10c., Weml ami Willow Ware, Cook Steves, Pailor Steves, Roem Steve. Steves et all kiiulf, Talilt- Oil Cleth, Spoons, llroeiin 10c, Lamps, RanjjeH, Parler Heater, Ktfg Stevi". He. Kvery Steve giinranlceil. Call nnd sec our goe.lt. 152 NORTH QUEEN STREET. LANCASTER, PA. vi.umiNu, VNittsntrtsAH, jtv. JKff STOCK OK CLOTHING FOR SPRING 1881, AT f). B. Hestetter & Sen's, Ne. PA CENTRE SQUARE. Having matin tiuiuuulftrort.ste bring before tlitiiuiblii! a II iif, stylish ami well limile stock el BEADY-MADE CL0TB1G, i; art! new pri-pareil te show litem ene et the tcesLf.irt'lully yi'lt'ctfit storks el (,'lelliinir In this pity, at the Lewt-.st Cash Piifcs. MK.VS, HOYS' AM) YOUTHS' CLOTHING j IN OKKAT AICIKTY. rieft: CoeiN el thtj Met S'ylish Designs anil at prices within Hit' ii'at'h el nll. -li:-i' us a call. D. B. Hosteller & Sed, ViMTIIltm. sr KINO OFKNINO AT 24 CENTRE SQUARE, Y K-lyil LANCASI'Ki:, PA. It Seems Impossible Tlmtarciiictly matlcet such common, simple plantB as Heps, Jtuchu, Maiulruke, Dandelion, tic, .slieulil make ae nianynuil .such marvelous una wonderful cures as Hep Jiitters tle, but when elil anil yeuiifj, rich anil peer. Paster anil Docter, lawyer ami Kiliter, all testiiv te having been cured bv them, you must believe anil try them yenrsel I, anil doubt no longer. Sec ether column. sl-2wd&w II ATS, JtV. -yy-ii.i.1 AMHON Ac FOMTKK. TIIK PALL STYLE OF SILK HAT, Ter yenni: grills, can be seen in our show win dow new. Wc could only get a lew in this slilpniful, but wc expect mere et them seen. Self-Conforming Hat H. GERHARPS New Tailoring Establishment, Ne. 6 Eaat King Street. I have just remplelt d titliii" up one el the Mucst TuHeriin; Ksiabltshnifiits te u found In this stale, anil am new prepared le show my I'liMtenier.s a .sleck el ;(.- is ter t he SPRING TRADE. ' which ler quality, slyie ami variety el Patterns Inn never liten ci-natt-d in this city. 1 will keep ami sell no goods which I cannot recommend teniy customers, no matter hew low iu price. All goods warr.iiiliil as represented, untl prices as low as the lowest, at Ne. 6 East King Street, INext Doer te the New Yerk Stere. H. GERHART. ?All. (AlHl'AKiN, 188J. Our llrst invoice et the season of FALL AND WINTER GOODS ren She Passed it Along. " 1 semi you my testimonial in reference te Spring IJIossem, having taken it ler dyspepsia, ami receiving almost immediate relief. passed It te my neighbor, -who l.s using It with same results. jtfltS. J. W. LEKFKLT, " Klmlra. N. Y.'- Price 10 ccntB. Fer sale, at II. U. Cochran's drug store, 137 North Queen street, Lancaster. Incredible. F. A. Scratch, tlrngglst," Kithvcn, tint., writes: ''1 have the greatest ceiilidence In your Jinrdeck Bleed Hitters. In one case with which I ant personally acquainted their sue cess was almost Incredible. One lady told me that half a bottle did her mere geed than hun dreds of dollars' worth of medicine she hail previously taken." Price 91. Fer sale at II, a. uecuruirs ami street, Lancaster. store, 13 North Queen Ge te II. B. Ceenran's Drag store, 137 North Oneen street, for Mrs. IYeerAan'3 iWrw JVa- itenai vyes. IYeerAan? New Fer brightness and durability et color,are nncmtaletl. Celer from 2 te S pounds, Directions in Kiigusii ami Herman. Price, cents. Wc tle i-ccemmantl, but only en its merit?. Silk Hats will be weru mere this full and winter than they have been ler several years. THE ARC3TIC hat is still the favorite for young gents as a knock' about, and sold for 9I.SH. Wc received this pait week a wagon lead el Traveling Bags & Satchels and the prices wc have put upon them will sell them every tlme. WILLIAMSON & FOSTER'S ONE-PRICE HOUSE, 36-38 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. PA. MENS WEAK Arrivctl tedav. Dnrinir this week- thnimiL- our Foreign orders will bein stock. We will be prepared te show the llnet line or ENGLISH AND FRENCH NOVELTIES ever eireretl te the citizens of Lancaster. In cluding a full line or the ever popular and celebrated Talumen's Specialties, confined ex clusively for our trade and conceded te lie the handsomest goods imported, together with a choice line of the latest novelties or the lead ing manufacturers. We Invite an early in spection et our stock, feeling it our duty te advise persons in want or a Suit or an Over coat ler Full or Winter te place their orders early before the rush commences te Insure, entire satislactien. All are cordially invited te call at 121 N. QUEEN STREET. J. K SMATJNG, ARTIST TAILOR. uwas JKWKtBKH. OILVKlt JEWKLBV, LACE PINS, EAIt UINGS AND BRACELETS. NECK CHAINS AND IIAIIC PINS. STUDS, SLEEVE BUTTONS AND SCAKF PINS OF SILVER. AUGUSTUS KIIOADS, Ne. 20 East King Street, Lancaster, Pa 1s 3ir" AJ