ftxtdligert& B)z mfak R Volume XVin-Ne. 37. DRY JOHN WANAMAKEK'S ADVEIITISKMNT. NEW GOODS FROM EUROPE, -AT- JOHN WANAMAKER'S, PHILADELPHIA. SILKS. Leng-pllc-pluhes. One. plain Made with pile longer than weal tiir,unil with high lustre, having the effects ei u very gle-syIur; ler coats, $9. Anether. llguicd, the figures lnuili! by varying the length et the pile: several color.-, $.'.0. .SeuWkin pluli, .:.7."i te SS.r.O Alternate wide stripes of moire antique and bright armurcii of an oriental character. St. Satin-dc-Lj-en brocade in tliev color coinbi ceinbi coinbi natiens: berdeaux bronze jj'cen bronze light breuxt light-green .ill n ted-breun iien-rnst The ell'eet- an; strong, tlumgh the colors aie net striking. Wide einhie Miipei covered -.ith grape vine da-nr'S'-e alternating Willi wide Mupcsef a lace elftct. Four dark i-iTccti, three in evening colors. i;. .1 Ol i N W A X A M A K Kit. Next-outer circle, C'hi"t:nil licet entrance, WHITE GOODS. Of tine white goods we have :; complete stock wanting nothing. Whatever one may want, that Indict, children or babies wear. Is ti lie leuml here, with many soils te cheese lreui. JOHN W ANA MAKER. Ncxt-outiM-eii-oli'- City-hall jnare. DRKS liiMIIW. A -li-jiet ilre-,s clelli, really el a line check with an irregular illumuiatien and a very ebcuie plaid; lint, looked at a yard away, it appears te be a basket. It is therelere a basket -elteet produced by color; it we mis take net, an eutiiely new and interfiling piece et coler-woi k. 'li inches wide; $I.10.i Anether cheviot el tne very same small checks, but without the basket Hied, simpler, plainer, and when closely looked at piebahly prettier, llieugh it is harillv fair te is.iv that, fl.20. JOllN WANA.MAKER. Third circle, southeast trem centre. CASHMEItES AND MERINOS. Lupin's merinos and cashmere., accepted throughout the world as the slam lard el qual ity, we have in sixlecn colors anil ten quali ties el each, f.O cents te l. Evening cabliineres et about thirty-live colors and shades, and of live qualities, .. cents te $1. JOIIX WAXAMAKKK. XeMeutercircIe.ThirUenlh In el entrance. ILACK DRK.SS goods. Black caslitiKies el seventeen qualitle-, 'Siy. cents te $J. and black merino? el twelve qualities. M cents te $!,"": el three makes. Lupin's, Vegel's amiCarli-r'-.; it three shades lel-hl.ick, medium Mack and lilue-lilaelc, JOHN WAXAMAKKK. Xet outer circle Chestnut -lreet entrance. JOHN WANAMAKER, Thirteenth, Chestnut and Market Streets and City Hall Square, Philadelphia. IK OS RITXICRS. rilON ItlTTKKS. IRON BITTERS! A TRUE TONIC. 1KOX KITTKIISare higl:lyreceinmi:iidel ter all diseases requiring a certain and effi cient tonic; especially 4 INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OP APPE TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY, &c. Itenriches fnc bleed, sticnglhens the muscles, and gives new lile te the nenes. It acta like a charm en the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as Tasting the Keed, Ilelchinq, Jlcatin the Stomach, Hearburn. etc. The- only Iren Preparation that will net Dlacken tlin teeth or give heartache. Sold by all druggists. Write lei the A It C Boek, 32 pp. et useful and amusing reading sent free. BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, 123-lydAw Fer Sale at COCHRAN'S DRUG STORE, 137 and 139 North Queen street, Lancaster. nevsi; I'UMisisiuim a odds. H OUSKI'UKNIMIIIXG. LARGE STOCK. GOOD GOODS. LOW PRICES. FOK STOVES, FURNACES, HEATERS, RANGES, OKFICK STOVES, KOOM STOVES. PARLOR STOVES, EGG .STOVES, AND ALL OTHER KIND OK STOVKS. Largest, Pine;:t and Cheapest Stock of GAS CHAN DELIERS in the-City. MAKBLEIZED SLATE MANTELS. Fleer Oil Cleth. Buckets !., Kroeais inc.. Table Knives, Speen, Wrted ant Willow Ware, Ac, go te FLTJOT & "WTLLSON'S, 152 & 154 North Queen Street. VS"PLU3IB1Na, TIN ROOFING AND SPOUTING SPECIALTIES. J'l. VMli IMS XOIIN L. ARNOLD. Ijxrgest, Finest ami Cheapest Stock ej CHANDELIERS KVKIiSKKX IX WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. GAS GLOBES CHEAP. TIN PLATE AND PLUMBER'S SUPPLIES. JOHN L. AENOLD, Nea. 11, 13 & 15 EAST ORANGE STREET; LANCASTER, PA. rapr2-tfd ED VVA D VVt'S BIKIiUANTILi: COlXKUK, Ne. 49 FIFTH AVENUE. Teimiiartal'KACTICALlHJSIXESSEnUCATIOX lias, ler many years and with great success, been the aim et Dutl's College. J he laillil'ul student lias here lacilitics for such a training as will qualify him for an imme diate entrance upon practical duties in any sphere e! life. Fer circulars, address 1. ulIFf & SON, l'ltutburi;ii, l'a. tS- liult-H Bookkeeping, published by Harper .t Bres., printed in colors, 100 pages. The largest work en the science published. A werK ter lSankcrs, Kallreads, Business Men and rractical Accountants. Price, K3.00. elMtd&w HOODS. LINENS. We have tonic Scotch bleached double damask table-linen tuat we'd like you te see. It Is 2 yards wide and $1 a yard. The patterns are seven, diverse enough, new, and we like, them all. If you And the same linens else where in Philadelphia or XewYeik, wc think: you'll find them at $2..ri0 or thereabouts. Xapkins te match, S7.M for thiee-quarters, and $-3 ler live-eighth. JOIIX WAXAMAKKK. Xe.t-euler circle, City-hall-squarc entrance. UMERWKAR. Twoe.vttemeael the Fiencli hand-made underwear. lately come te us, attract notice, borne el it is se plain that It seems scarcely te belong te the class el embroidered work it reminds one rather et" the hand-work we used te make families here twenty-live years age. Thoet her extreme is tlicriche-.tet embroidery. It needs te be seen. Xobedy'll believe I mm descilptieu the work that is in it; the llne uess, the richness, the extravagance. We show- it with pleasuie. At the same lime see what the sewing ma chine has dene for us, in our Amciicau fac tory made underwear. Kncli has a perlectlen et its own. Faetory-wei k, made as wcgetit, is a new grade et sewing. JOHX WAXAMAKKK. West fiein Che.-tnut-streel entrance. TTPIIOLSTERY. U One of the most beautiful et the draper ies and lurniturc-eever.s that have come te us this year is a very qniel linsel-aud-silk fabric, just received, Jli."K. JOIIX WAXAMAKKK. Xerii.vcsl gallery. C CARPETS. J .We are ellen told that wc have uncom monly choiee pattern-, in carpel-". Wecertaiuly have the best makes. JOIIX WAXAMAKKK. X'eilhcrn gallery. VK1V LIXKX HANDKERCHIEFS WITH J colored borders have come ; but, se tar as we have seen vet, there's nothing notably new in styles. They are alme-tall mechanical liguresel the general character that has pie , vancti lorseme menins. Twe new initial handkeicliicfs: one ein 1 breidercd in colors, 12) cents; one with very 1 large, white, block or diamond initials formed , by a hemstitch stilch, cents. The latter is . vi'iy neat indeed. JOHN WAXAMAKKK. I Ouli-rciicle, Chestnut street entrance. K(is i:i TTNKS. SURE APPETISER. BALTIMORE, MD. lOUSKMlKNlSIII NO. S UI'l'TAKS. TOI1N L. ARNOLD. LAXCASTEK, HONAZ.. D UFF'S MKKCAXTILK COLLKliK, Lancaster Jntcliigencer. FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 14, 1881. FROM ANYIL TO PULPIT. THE STOKY OF A USEFUL. LIKE. Kebert Uellyer's Boyhood, Ileine Influence, Apprenticeship, Emleratlen and Experience. Frem his Address at Eastman's Business Col lege. Concluded lreiu yesterday.l Auethcr thing I remember. It fell out iu the course of time that I would -walk ever the moors reading, something I read would set me thinking en my own ac count, and then at last I would talk it out te myself, and te the sheep, who were, by the way, very geed listeners indeed. Then avast and awlul sorrow struck me, which ended in my seeking the only refuge there is for a man when the world rocks under him and life grows dark in the shadow of death. I began te feel after Ged, and in no long time found my way into the McthedUt meeting, and told them all about it. They were very old neighbors, had known me some ten ycais, and, as the habit is of that grand old church, they made me speak in the meeting, and at last invited me te preach for nothing a Sunday and find myself. I think Meilsen, who is just dead, was a babe in arms in euc of the small places where I first tried my wiugs, and that I stayed ever Sunday with her grandfather, old Kebert Bland, of Iiuinsall, in Craven. I knew I lest all tiack of time that Sunday, and preached about two hours, which was a great shame. 1 had much better have remem bered the adviee of the English judge, who, when some euc asked him hew long he thought a sermon ought te be, answered, twenty minutes, with a leaning te the side of mercy. lut ilieie I was, te my own vast astonishment, in a pulpit, and though the sermon was no doubt as peer as poverty I could say " a peer thing, but mine own,'' and the best I could de up te date. Before I was born my father wanted teH emigrate te tins country, but could never raise the money ; and all through my childhood they were regretting that it still could net be done. Se I grew up with the vision of this new world in my nature, and the longing te come here that I might find my way into a wider life. I wanted le be where you de net seek the work, but the we:k seelcrf you ; te be net a mere cipher in a monarchy, but a factor in a republic. I Ifad no vote and iu voice in the government. 1 wanted one. I was compelled te dolt" my cap and bend before these who had money and rank. I hated it. Radicalism was iu my bones. Rad icalism in England thirty years age was a byword and a hissing. I found the woman I watded for a wife. I tell her new she made eyes at me when I was preaching. If wc had a family there would be no chance at an education for them, or a rise it life. My whole ambition still was te make my way as a smith, but e0 cents was all one get for shoeing a liorse all around ever there, and that left a very small mar gin. Se en a gleaming April day the young wife and husband set sail in an old ship called the Roscius, and in the steer age, te seek our fortune and find it in this new world. Yeu have heard about the preaching. I went at it again, with the old Yorkshire burr in my tongue, and my h's as it might happen, but usually wrong. One geed brother told me years after he could net understand euc word iu ten that I said, but I made him iccl first-rate. I had te learn what was really a new tongue, and worse than that, te unlearn an old one, old almost as Chaucer, and te make my living at the anvil. Yen knew, I suppose, that there are twoseits of preachers in the Methodist body. One sort finds itself and the ether is found. I had te find my self. There was no room for me iu the upper rank, se for ten years it was hard and steady hammering week days and preaching Suudays, ene year en the ether side and nine years ou this side. New and then some peer fellow comes along and tells me hew little he gets for preaching. I have te pity him from my heart, and then te tell him that my salary divided up among the first tin years comes te just Te cents u year, and I get that for three ser mons I preached for the Baptists. Yet I was a very happy man, and shall be for ever grateful te my old mother church for giving me the chance. But the time came when I found I was no longer a Methodist. Hew it was that the old faith was lest out of me docs net come within the scope of my discourse. All I can say is that. I began te think about as I de new. It felt out also that I was wanted in the West te work among the peer in my dear old home for twenty years, Chicago. T: en I bid gcod gced by te the anvil forever, and se at last struck the supreme joy of my life as a preacher and pastor, ami was fairly landed for geed and all in the work I am doing te-day. Guided by an Inward Light. IV. I said the fourth thing in a man's life is that geed fortune which is but an other name for the previdence of Ged. It would be a fatal blunder te draw te my conclusion and leave this dut, and iny side of the question can be stated in very sim ple terms. " Friends," fellow what they call the " inward light." Se far I am a " Friend." Iu that first great wrench of leaving my mother country and my mother who was a widow, this inward light pointed te Pennsylvania. I went there without a question. I see new it was the one thing te de. It shone for me again when I was invited West. I went with out question. It was the one thing te de. When the smoke began te clear away after the great lire it shone again. I was te stay light there, and bear my share of the burden. There was no way open but te stay, nor was there any ether way se wel come. Why de I tell you this ? Because it is the most pregnant truth you can take te your heart. The inward light will be sure te shine for you in the supreme crisis of you life. Don't budge ene step until your see it. Hang en until then te the thing you arc doing, and de your best, but when it shine, don't argue or doubt or fear. Fellow the light. And don't call this mere mysticism. It is the most solid blKi'.v of common sense I have te give yen. Concluding; Suggestions. New let me give you in conclusion what you would call " two or three wrinkles," the pathetic cry of one in his afternoon te youth in its fcesh morning. First. If you want te de well, keep well, if you possibly can. De net let even your education rob you of your health. It is about the worst thing you can de under the whip and spur of a noble purpose, and it is what vast numbers de te their life long regret. When a fine painter took the butcher te see one of his pictures he said, " Aye, Maistcr Hayden, it's a grand pic ture, but I doubt whether you could have done it if you had net eaten my beef." And I think there was a grain of truth in the remark. They say baseball is getting into the hands of the gamblers and that young men are shy of it of a geed breed ing. I should be very sorry te think se. It is the handsomest game 'that ever was LANCASTER, PA.5 FRIDAY. OCTOBER played and one of the healthiest. Flay baseball and pull a beat, and get your chance in vacation at long tramps and hard beds, and rough, wholesome fare ; eat well and sleep well ; be as clean all through and all ever as you are in a drawing room, and then you will net only be able te de your day's work in this world like a man, but when the years bring their inevitable burden you will be able say with Adam in the play " Though I leek old, yetaui I strentjand lusty. Fer in my youth I never didapply Het and rebellious liquors te my bleed ; Xer did net with unbaslitul forehead wee The means of weakness and debility ; Therefore my age is as a lusty winter, Freity, but kindly." Remember this, tee, that with health and strength te back you, life means hard work, and hard work en long lince with native ability and geed conduct means success. I will venture le say that this, as a rule, wc can trust is always the story of the young man who begins life with no advantage of position or patronage and makes his way te a geed place. He gives his heart te what he has te de, net half the time but all llic time, net grudgingly but gladly, and net merely for the sake of salary, but because he loves te be at it and makes the work in a geed measure its own rcwaid. It shall come te pass, if you take held like this, that men will say you have a genius for what you take in hand. But you will knew that one of the fine qualities iu a genius for anything is an absorbing love for it, and the power of in tense application by which every ether power is set te its finest edge and directed te the one great purpese the man holds in his heart and brain. Yeu raav set this truth in whatever light you will, of busi ness, or work en the common levels or work ouihe loftiest heights, te give your heart te it is one of the grandest secrets of success. It might seem te yen that a great many men go from the bottom te the top of the ladder at one jump. It is net true. It is never true. All the men I knew who have made a real success of their life are hard climbers. The ether way is like the monkey toy of the children. Yen go up swiftly ever the top and come down hesd first te begin again. This story of mine is of ue use te you if you forget that from the day I left the little cottage te the day I came te Xew Yerk my life divides itself into two sec tions of steady striving en long lines. Twenty-one years at the anvil and twenty one years in the West, and iu these there is no break except that I raade te get fc'em the Old World te the New. And new 1 see that these forty-two years all belong together, and in every year something was done for these that were still waiting. In some of the later ye us iu the shop I could net but feel that I was the equal as a preacher of a geed many men who did nothing else, and would wonder whether I should die as my father did at the anvil. But then wc had a houseful of children, aud my hammer was a capital weapon te keep the wolf from the deer and keep things fair and true, se net one step would I go until that light shone clear and I knew I was en a sure adventure. Thcie is one mere word. When you get fit ought with the college, and take held of your life's work, de net think of making a fortune as the euc grand aim of your life, but carving out a home, finding a geed true woman for your wife, and rais ing, please Ged, a geed family. I de net cry down money. I think it is a geed cer vant aud a geed friend, but it is about as cruel a master as ever used a whip. A shrewd farmer said te me once, " Never marry for money ,-my lad, marry for love ; but if thou finds a nice girl that has money, try te love her." I would net say that te you, but this : If you find the nice girl, some such match for you as my mother was for my father, and if you leve her, marry her, if she will have you, though she hns net a dollar te her name. This is a sere evil under our American sun, that there should be such mishap and disaster in the wedded life. It lies in this, that in the most momentous thing wc can de, wc se often use the least judg ment. Hear Story's description of the Girl of the Period : "She is perfect te whirl in a wait.. Aud her shoulders show well en a soft divan, as she lounges at night and spreads her silks, aiid plays with her bracelets, and flirts her fatx But is this the thing for a mother and a wife? Can love crer grew en such barren rocks ? Is this the com panion te lalee for life? Yeu might as well marry a music box ! " Wc who batfe had our turn want the young men of your birth aud breeding te raise a generation of nobler and better type, boys and girls strong of arm and sure of feet, dccp-chestcd, sunny-hearted, full of faculty, aud wholesome te the in nermost ucrve, and te de this you must de two things ; give them noble mothers, and don't " linger shivering en the brink aud fear te launch away, " but when you knew you can take care of a home in a simple wholesome fashion, go right te work and de il. Shall I close with this little poem ? Speak thou the truth, let ethers four , And trim their words for pay ; In pleasant sunshine of pretence Let ethers basktheirday. Guard thou the fact, though clouds el .niht Down en thy watch-tower steep. Though thou MhculdVt vce thy heart's delight Berne from thee by their sweep. Face thou the wind : Though safer :ecm In shelter te abide. We were net made te sit and dream, .. The Mafe must II rut be tried. Shew thou llic light. It conscience gleam, ci net thy bmhcl down, The mnallcit spark may uend a beam O'er hamlet, tower and town. Wee. unto him, ou safety bent, Who creeps trem ags te yeulll. Failing U grasp his lite'rt intent IJecjiHC he tears the truth. Be trite te every inmost thought. And as thy thought, thy speech. What thou h iat net by striving bought rresume net thou te leach. Then each wild gust the mist shall c:c jr Wc new sec darkly through, And justilicd at last appear The true, in Him tltat's true. Sudden Wealth. The Philadelphia papers tell a story of a man named Timethy Ceyle, who was a partner with his brother in the liquor busi ness iu that city until 1S77, when he be came insane from fever and was confined in a lunatic asylum, two years of the time being in au institution near Baltimore. His brother, Edward Ceyle, died in 1870, leaving no relatives in this country but Timethy. Distant relatives induced a Philadelphia acquaintance te ad minister upon the estate. About this time Timethy Ceyle was discharged from the asylum entirely sane, aud through attor neys he instituted suit te recover the part nership property. The mother in Ireland also claimed the property, and several years of litigation was in prospect, when a short time age a settlement was arrived at between the mother and her son Timo Time thy, whereby, by the payment of a large sum of money, an assignment of all the mother's interest in the cstate of Edward Ceyle & Brether and in the estate of Edward Ceylo was made te Timethy Ceyle. Decrees have been made in the orphans' court and common pleas court of Philadelphia confirming this settlement. By this means Timethy Ceyle who two short years age was in an insane 14, 1881. asylum without property whatever, and with a decree of lunacy against him, is made independent for life, the accounts in the orphans' court showing that in cash and book debts alone he becomes the owner of about $80,000, and is, moreover, the present owner of real cstate worth about $25,000 mere, aud has the title te some $25,000 mere of real estate subject te the life interest of his mother. Southern Items. Flerida will net make much of a potato crop this year. The pecan crop of Louisiana will be a large ene. The chestnut crop of Tennossce will be large. The value of the sheep iu Texas is $13, 800,000. A great many Northern psople are go ge iug te spend the winter in Mobile. A number of-artesian wells have been bored in Marksville, Louisiana. Tennossce is the second peanut preduc ing state in the Union. The depth reached in the artesian well at Durham, North Carolina, is 1,530 fectj Ninety-one wagon leads of dried fruit seen in one day en the read from Knox Knex villc, Tennessee, te Maynardville. T..T. Jarnagan, a merchant near Tate Spring, Tennessee, bought $1,000 worth of dried fruit last Saturday. Ou an average the cotton and corn crops of Seuth Alabama are hotter than they were last year. Savannah, Ga., has shipped mere cotton te foreign ports since September 1 than any pert except New Orleans. At Talladega (Ala.) a man with a two acre patch of melons made $207 profit and $50 te treat en, and a geed crop of hay. Arkansas complains of a plethora of squirrels they pick cotton with a consid erable ameuut of supcrfiueus amount of activity. Taken for Urantcd. Said the reporter, entering the store of Smith, Smithson tte Ce., "I understand that Mr. Smith is dead, aud I have come te get a few points for a netice in the Daily Ltibricalpr." The shepman gives birth place, age and a few ether facts. " Was there "anything of public interest about the deceased ?" asked the Jreperter. " Ne," was the reply, " nothing that I think of. It is hardly worth mentioning, pet haps, that Mr. Smith was the eldest Masen, one of the original Frec-Seilcrs, and the man who first mentioned General Garfield in connection with the presi dency." " Oh, I've get all that down," said the reporter. " We put that in all our death notices new ; bnt is there any thing of special interest ?" " Ne." " Geed morning, sir." Aft-aid She'd Catch Celt!. "De you love me?' "Yes," she an swered, "better than anything else iu the world. It's a beautiful night for a moon light drive." A moonlight drive would cost at least three dollars, aud as he agi tated .seventeen cents in his right tteusers pocket and he surveyed the lunar orb with a knowing gaze, and remarked : " I should be se happy te take you, but it's a wet moon, aud you knew you arc se liable te catch cold, dear." The next morning the disappointed maiden observed te her moth er : " Charley and I have quit. He knows a heap about the weather, but he's a per fect ignoramus about me." Consumption et the lung tissue must steadi ly increase by the retention of the foul cor ruption. Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup promotes gentle expectoration, and gives great relict te these sutrering with Consumption. l'onder en tticse Tmtlis. Kidney-Wert Is nature's remedy for kidney and liver diseases, piles and constipation. Sediment or mucous In the urine isiiMirc indication el disease. Take Kidney-Wert. Torpid liver and kidneys poison the bleed. Kidney-Wert levives them and cleanses the system Headache. bilieusatiaeljM.dizziness, and less et appetite, arc cured by Kidney-Wert. See advertisement. elli lwdSw The Country. Who that has ever lived anytime in the conn cenn try but must have heard el the virtues of Bur dock us u bleed purilier. Burdock bleed Bit ters euro dyspepsia, biliousness and all disor der arising trem impure bleed or deranged liver or kidneys. -I't'icefl. Fer sale at 11. 15. Cochran's drug Mere, 1:57 Xeith Queen street, Lancaster. Kconeiny. A tort line may be .spent in Using ineffectual medicines, when by applying Themas' Eclec tric Oil a speedy and economical cure can be cltccted. In cases cl rheumatism, lame bauk, bodily ailments, or pains of every description, it uflurds instant relict. Fer sale at II. B. Coch ran's tfrug store, le" Xerth Queen street, Lan caster. I'rlglitiul .'Misery. Mr. Win, roinerey. Banger, Me., writes: "1 have for a long time sullered Irein contin ual constipation, making my life a misery, and causing headache and (rightful cramps. Mr. Tliomusen (who has been lately visiting in'Bullale). induced me try the Spring Blos Bles eom. It has pertectlv cured me." Trice SO cents. Fer sale at 11. B, Cochran's drug store, 137 North Queen street, Lancaster. V1I1NA ASD OLAtiSIVAKt.. J. It. MARTIN & CO. China, Glass & Queensware Department. SPKVTAr.TJES AXIi :U VET.T1F.8 In all Fine Grades or KXULISII. GKILMAN, FKKNC1I AND JAPANKSK em Karc Pieces for Cabinets. IJISQUK FIUUKES AND OKOUl'S IN G BEAT VAKIETV. Bar and Hetel Goods A SPECIALTY. J. B. MARTIN & CO., Cor. W. King and Prince Streets, LANCASTEK. FA. HO.UOKS, &V. WUITKWINK V1NKGAK.95 ViZK CK5JT. Alcohol, Wine? and Liquors, Coffees, Sugars and Teas, all at KINGWALT'S tcbl9-lvd Ne. 303 West King Street. T ADIES- UAIlt DKESSKIt. MRS. C. LILLET, Ladies' Hair Dresser. Manufacturer and Dealer in Hair Wevk, Ladles' and Gents' Wigs. Combings straight ened and made te order. Hair Jewelry or all kinds made up. Alse, Kid Gloves anil Feath ers cleaned anil dyed: Alse, Ladles' Shampoo- "S" 425 & 227 NORTH QUEEN STLET, e."-2nid Four doers above 1. K. IL Depot. DRY s TRAWBK1DGE & CLOTHIER. AN EXHIBIT Is new being STRAWBRIME & CLOTHIER, Iu every THIRTY-TWO DEPARTMENTS, Of the newest, earnest and most fashienable things in ALL KINDS OF DRY GOODS, Fer the cemiug Fall aud Winter. Especially does this apply te. Silks, Velvets and Plushes, Novelties in Dress Textures, Plain Dress Goods, Fancy Black Fabrics, Cleths and Cleakings, Hosiery and Underwear, Linen Goods, Kid and Fabric Gloves, Wc have, besides, the largest STAPLE Such as Prints, Muslins, Sheetings, Weel and Canten Flannels, Blankets, Quilts, &e. Our picparatiens for the Fall and Winter trade arc en se vast a scale that no written description can de them justice, bnt a personal visit is absolutely necessary for a proper appreciation. STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER, EIGHTH AND MARKET STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, VLOTIIXil, SC. R OSKNSTKIM'S OXK l'KIUK HOUSE. SECOND OUR ASSORTMENT OF Men's Fall Overcoats aud Illtttes, PLAIN, SILK FACED, SILK LINED TIUiOUGlIOlT, $8 te $35. Unique Styles Men's Fall Suits 10 te 835. NOVELTIES. BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S SUITS AND OVERCOATS, $4 te $18. THE HYCICLE SHIUT IN DIFFERENT SHADES, $2.50. AL. ROSENSTEIN'S ONE PRICE HOUSE, (NEXT DOOU TO SIIUI.TZ A IIIIO.'S HAT STOKE). Ne. 37 North Queen Street, F ALT. CAMPAIGN. P MYERS & Are belter prepared limn ever te accommodate the public in BEADY-MADE CLOTHING, FOIt MEN, YOUTHS, BOYS AM) C'lMMlUEX, At bottom prices", all our own maiiulaclnrc no SlieiMy Cletlilnif. A man can gut the best Ten Dellar All Weel Suit at Centre Hall sold In America. While this U a specialty, yet all our Clothing la selil proportionately cheap. Buying your Clothing at Centre Hall you save one preilt. Our Custom Department Is lull and complete. It you want a Cheap BtislnesH Suit you can have it made te order (all wool) from Fifteen te Twenty-live Dollars. Dress Suits from Eighteen te Forty Dollars. And remember you have the Largest Stock and the Best Variety le select from, and satistactien in every way guaranteed. We arc prepared te make up at. short notice and In the best style and at the lowest prices. Our Cutters arc Flrt-Ciurs. Our stock et GENTOEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS Is full and complete. Don't rail le call and leek through Centre Hall before you make yeui Kail and Winter purchase. Yeu will tlnd willing hands te show you through the iiiiiiu-iise stock et Woolens. Overcoats by the hundred ler Men, Youth?, Beys and Children. MYERS & RATHFON. CENTRE HALT,, Se. 12 EAST K1SH STREET, LANCASTER PEJLVA. MEDICAL. T)A1CKKK'S UAIlt BALSAM. PARKER'S HAIR DA T.SAM. The Best, Cheapest and Me-jt Economical Hair Dressing Never lails te restore youthful color te gray hair. 50c. and 1 sixes. ... PARKER'S GINGER TONIC Ginger, Buchu, Mandrake, and many of the best medi cines known are here combined Inte a medicine of such varied powers, as te make it the greatest Bleed Purlflerand Tne Best Ilealtn ana Strength Restorer Kvcr Used. It cures Complaints of Women, and diseases et the Stomach, Bowels, Lungs, Liver anil Kidneys, and Is entirely different Irem Bitters, Ginger-Essences, and etner Tonics, as it never intoxicates. 50c. and 1 sizes. .HISCOX & CO., Chemists, N. Y. Large saving buying $1 size. scpl2-lyccdcewAw Price Twe Cents. GOODS. S" TKAWUK1DGE & VL.UTUIEK. held daily by ene of their Ladie3 Ready-Made Garments, Mibses' and Cbildren's Suits, Beys' Clething1, Cermets and Muslin Underwear, Shawls and Skirts, Infants' Underwear, Men's Furnishing Goods, Ribbons and Laces. stock we have ever shown in GOODS, oct.leuw dirAllw. 7OSKN.STKIN'.S ONE PKICI! HOU.SK. K" TO NONE- Lancaster, Pa. ALL. CAMl'AMiN. RATHFON TARKE1CS GIAGEK TOXIC.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers