Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, November 19, 1881, Image 1

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    SL)t Xmifte
e.uw xvin--N 6S.
DBT GOODS.
JOHN WANAMAICKK's ADVfcKTISEMKNT.
JOHN WANAMAKER
CALLS
SPECIAL ATTENTION
TO
FOLLOWING
Our cliciilur illks, W-.nch, arc bough
cntin-ly lrem Ihc makci- in Lyens this
tall fei the (list time. We lmc advan
tage In the-pi ice, and besides a degiee
of ceulideuce net te be get in miscel
laneous buj Iiik
Xett-entci clu It-, Chrstnut-.St. cntiunie.
It there :mj tiling black at 7 cente
better than llanni'l : It U et the sim
plest et all waning; and naturally
money gees a lenjr way in buying it.
Kluclc -eij;c at $l.i"i, lull .v. Indies
wide; i-vaelly the wholesale price to
day. Xct-eutei clitic, Chc-l-nut bt. cnlianec
Camel's hall iihll eevcied with
betiicltc plaid; the tine se hea i!y
covered with blight bourctte single
threads as toeeii-tltiitca high illumi
nation. $r!5
1 bird elide, southeast lieni ctsntie.
I.ttillcs coats ei eciy jiadcaie in a
;oed light in the new cetnei ; umlit
theic Isn't uiieuh loom it is because
many buyers arc theic.
Xew tedaj. Ce.it- et light cloths
tuinmcd nllli plush, for jeung ladies
only; the size and Mles aic jeunjr.
$11 and $11.
1301 Cliestnut ".III el
Lengthening and ic djing seal ee.it.-i ;
aud I he soenei it is done the bettci.
Aincilt.ui iljc, of cetiiKc; but iei sec
ond dyeing it i-n't ueith while te -je-nd
te Londen.
l!y the way, would jeu like te loelc
into our buy fui noikieom en the
thltd lloei ? " ou sli.ill sec all Milts el
liirekliiuanil even' pioccssef making
.mil a-k as in my iiesteus as you like.
I jO-iCh'Miuit "-ticet
JOHN WANAMAKER,
Grand Depot, 13th street, Market and Chestnut,
PHILADELPHIA
ncex mttjsrs.
rKON ttlTTKItS.
IRON BITTERS!
A TRUE TONIO. SURE APPETISER.
IltOV ISlTTKlSSui-uliigl lylieeeniuicndcd tot all dlscascj leqi.iring a certain and cfli
dent tome; e-peeially
INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OK APPE
TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY, &c.
11 Clinches the bleed, stieiigthcus the muscle, and gives new lite te tlie ncnes. 11 acts
like a el. arm en the digestive eigans. removing all dyspeptic pyir.ptenm. such as Tasting thr
reed, lielchtnrj. Ileal m the iitemaeh. Heat Ibutn, etc The only Iren l'reparatieti that will
net ulackeu tlie tnetli or j;ie lieaUache. bold by all di uggltts. Wiitc tei the A I! C Uoek, 32
pp. et useful and amusing icidiuif xenlec.
BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY,
I.3-ldAu
Fer Sale at COCHRAN'S DRUG
street, Lancaster.
HOOKS AJfI HTAtlONERl.
OUHUOL IIOOHSI
SCHOOL BOOKS! SCHOOL BOOKS!
All Scheel ISoeks and fechoel Supplies at tne
-ry low est rates at
L. M. FLYNN'S,
Ne. 42 WKST KINO STKKET.
J
OUN KAMI'S hOSis.
SCHOOL- BOOKS
reu TUB-
LANCASTER SCHOOLS,
AT THE
LOWEST PRICES,
AT THE
BOOKSTORE
OF
JOM BAER'S SOUS,
15 ted 17 NORTH WEEN STREET,
I. AND AST Kit. A.
HOTELS.
JS'
IOW Ol'KN M'llLCUUt HOUSE,- Oft
Enroneen plnn. lilninx ltoems iei
Ladles and Gentlemen. Entrance at e. i
North OnUe street. Clam and Turtle Soup Soup
Lebster Salad, Oysters In Every Style and all
the Delicacies et the Season. Vc6011dtthe
patronage el the public. inny7-tid
STKAMKO OYSTLKS.
Specialty made erstcatnea Oysters at the
Sl'KECIIER HOUSE,
Ne. 27 Xerth Duke btrect.
Having lurnlshcd our Kestaunint Mith a
boiler for steaming eystcis. wc take tins incth
ed et Informing the public that wc arenrc
pareil at ill limes te Jnrnish them te families
at their house), or at the restaurant.
Ladles' entrance. Ne. 27 North Duke street
GKOKF . COPELAND.
03t23-tld Proprietors.
L.IO.VOKH, CC.
:
l)INOWALT'S
WIXE, LIQU014. ALCOHOL AND
GROCERY STORE.
fcMG-lycl NO, 205 TVKST KING STUEET.
THE
Striped moleskin plush, SMttcli, $ij.
Vciy xicn solid silk plush stilpcs en
ottoman silk with line stiipes el satin
iiicieilleux between, $610. Adistin
guiahed nerclty from I'an-.
Iieiy-white -.itln dc I.yen with bold
biecadc el cream pln-di pickeil out w ith
uncut plush or the same colei, $10.
Xet eutci circle. Chestnut St. entiauc .
I.'.iili email diedfs ei small figuicd
plaids; net a', all like small checks aud
net at all like plaids ; a new effect alto
getlier ; stiengei than sniallchecks and
les gi.iy thiu many coleied plaid-,
$1.50. Considered decidedly MjlNh.
The cloths aie rather heavy.
Second elide, southeast fiem centic.
Muslin undciweai el a gi.ute leuud
newhcicelse in the stoics of l'liiladcl
phla and New- Yeik, w ith the exception
of a single house ; i. c, well made and
or line enough niateiial without any
cxtniTagance v.liatctei, iiiid at cry
medeiatc pucca ; se low Indeed that
families cannot allot tl te de the miiie
weik at home.
We-l lieni Clic-tnM slice! entiance.
We hac hid niadea aiiely et veij
lich lies of cmbieidcry surali, and
much finei -urali th in w e have -con in
ica-'yinade tics. S5 cents te $2. The
iiuality is the sime in them all. The
d'Hcreiice is in width and csnbieideiy.
Jhistii'te tie-, cmbieidcicd with silk
and cotton, a a cry unique and (tlcdhe
combination.
Quite handsome lebieideud n-iill
lie-at 1" cents.
Hi-t elide, -euthta-t lieni ce.itn.
ICON KITTKKS.
BALTIMORE, MD.
STORE, 137 and 139 North Queen
CLOTllIXll.
R
i;adv madk
In CIIEAI'LU THAN
CUSTOM MADE
OLOTHHSTGr-
Win :
IJecauie It can be bought in iy lniich
laigei qu.intltics, ami the Clethe
bought in l.iigcrqu.intitiea direct fiem
Ihc inanuf ictei lc ; because rculj m ide
Clothing is made boleie the busy time
begins and when Hber is abmidinl :
because theic Is no measuring ami
diaughting; because one bundled ei
moie arc cut at a stieke: beciui-e t lien
Minds aie made exactly alike, anil hun
dreds et thousands with very slight dit
to encc ; because t hey aie made it bout
particular instructions te be lolleued
in each cai-e ; because the business can
be cairic'l en meie exclusidy.
KEADY-MADE CI.OTHlN( will lit
ninety live per cent, oreur customers,
because it is made lieni patterns that
will tit all vaiietiesr't tonus. Itutl.iste
ami lenns must be studied, and must
be llttcd as i ell as suited, w bieh can be
done when traile in large enough te jus
tify a rull assortment, ir w hat j en buy
is net what veu expected, or jouaie
net satisfied, come back and tiade it oil
ei get your money.
We have the Latest Slj les In
NECKTIES,
and some aie very pretty. Conic ami
bee them !
Just ns seen .w the w eat her is cooler
yen will need join 4
Heavy Underwear,
and te avoid a ci en d then, you h id bet
ter come and make yeui selections
new .
k
36-38 EAST KING STREET,
LANCASTER. PA.
LAIUhS A.VU GUNTS, IF VOO AVANl' A
Geed and Fine fitting Beet or Shee
Ucady-m ide or Made te Oideige te
V. rifEMENZ'S,
Ne. 101 North Queen Street.
Custom Weife Specially. JyMldS&W
LANCASTER,
Hancastcr Jntclltgcnccr.
SATURDAY EVENING, NOV. 19, 1881.
IRELAND.
ecfall)
Misrepresented
Drama.
in OH'l aud
Tun Ileal Jrlsli
Man, Irl-h
Vttest.
Uirl and Iriih
Fiem Ceikletlei bj I).
in Tolt ele lilade.
11. Lecke ("Xasby ")
I left Cerk d.iy before yesterday for the
illaije of IJautry, iu county Cerk, some
feity miles distaut, owned aud controlled
by My Lord Bantiy, who is, 01 at least
eiiht te be, j:ic of the lichest men in
It eland. 0
Leaving the main stiec, which is, like
all the stieetb el Itish villajies, made up of
bmallstoieserhhops as they aie tbete
called, jeu walk up a steep hill, thieuj;h a
cioekcd sheet, and you lind jeuiself iu
the inidbt of the reulatieu Itish cabius
niLci able sttuctures of stones piled one
upon another, net even daubed ith plas
ter, with ue windows as a tulc, though tue
meie pictentieus eucshaea single pane
et glais in the wall somewhere However,
as that pane i& almost invariably biekcn,
if, piineipal use is the cxtia ventilation it
aHerds.
The cabin is the same size as these en
faims, say fiem ten te twelve feet wide
by lifttcn or sixteen in length. In the
ceunt: j, however, they de have the space
abeve te the th.ttehed toef ; but land is
meie valuable in the -. lll.tgcs, and Mv
Letd lautry'acxpen--'s in Louden and
Paris ate enouneus lie must get meie
money out of the 1I1 ieis, and he makes
two stciieseut of l.f tetched hovel, aud
by ciewdiug iu t I uiulics makesdouble
lent. The liist lloei is net above live feet
sit inches in height, aud the upper N a
"owl feet site iter. In neither lloer can au
eidinary man stand upiij;ht.
We went up themiseiable btaiis in one
of them, and gained the still meie miser
able den above. It was mero like a ceilin
than a 100111, aud the idea of a cefliu was
bieu-ht ieicibly te the mind as you
glanced at the wi etched occupants. On
a misetablc bed of diied leaves eeveicd
w ith potato sacks, en the one side' was the
emaciated fenn of a man dyins of starva
tion aud consumption. He had about
feity eight beiws of life in him. Upen my
weid, I felth.ippy te sce he was se near
death. Fer, having an excellent reputa
tion, having alway.s been a geed ruau, he
was ccitain te go, after death, where there
would net be Hie slightest possible chance
of meeting My Loul JJantiy. In the ether
comer was a Hat stone upon which a cen-s-umpUvc
lire of peat was binning, the
.smoke 1'iUhv' the 100m. Huddled mound
tiiis lite
wcic live children, under the
watehful
3eet a vciy cemciy woman
The childien wne barefooted and steek-
ingk.ss, ,uul clad in the most depleiable
j.igs, while the mother, ale bai cfoeted,
wv.s clothed iu the legular cotton slip,
without a pailiclc of under clothing of any
kmd 01 desciiptien. And into that ganet
peer ns it was, came ether woman, net
clothed sullicicntly te be decent, te boil
their potatoes at the wictched liic. They
haca piaetice el exchanging litcs in this
way, that none shall uc wasted.
" What de jeu pay ler this ap.ut
iiR'nt.'" " Tcupeuec .1 week, mii V
' Ate ou in aueais ler lent ?"
"Yes, sei. lie I pointing te her hus
band has been .sick, s.ir, for mouths, sei,
ami cud net weik.''
" What will jeu de if he dies .'"'
' Vvre shall be put out sei ."
This with no bin st of auguibh, with no
special tone of anger or manifestation of
emotion. Te be "put out" is tlie com
mon let or the lush laborer and the Iiish
wile, and they exp"ct it.
And within a mile el that wretched
snot, 01 that dying man aud staiving
child en, my Leid ilantiy has the most
beautiful castle, with luxurious futnituic,
and lilled with pampered lluukics, his
stables ciewded with the most wonder
ful heiscs, aud his table groaning under
the weight of the luxuries el every
clime.
Suicly net fur tenpcu.ee a week will he
te.ir this woman fiem the side of her dead
husband, and threw her with her helpless
childicn out into the cold and wet
sheet'.'
Yes, but he will though.
Fei this family is but one of many
thousand, en the laud which .1 bad king
stelj hum the people who owned it.
Wcic this tiie only case, he might relent ;
but, should he ile it iu this case, he
would have te de il ler the ethcts, and
tenpence a week liem thousands aggre
gates a cry large sum ; ami juy Jjuru
Uantrj'h expenses ate very high, for it
costs money teiun a castle ; and there is
his house in Londen, his house in Paris,
aud his house in Keine, and his houses
the Loul knows whcie. and then his
jacht is rather expenshe, as his ellicers
and men must be paid, te say nothing of
the laidcr and wines necessary te enter
tain his friends ; and then theic is the
terrible " expense of entertaining his
friends fiem Londen during the sheeting
season, and occasional losses at play, and
all that.
Cleat ly the Widow Flanagan mutt either
pay her lent, or be be pitched out into the
street te make room for some ether widow
w he can pay, for a w hile at least ; and,
when she can't pay, there aie ethers
who can.
It is needless te add that theic is in
liaiitrV Day : splendid Lnglish guubeat,
armed, as in time el war, with burnished
guns, with bombs of all soils of explosive
powder, 1 illcd guns w hieri would kueck peer
Hautcy into a cocked hat in teu minutes,
with line-looking marines, armed te the
teeth, which, with the military en shore,
would make it very warm for the Widow
Flanagan and her liicnds should they pre
sume te int ei fere with my lord's land
agent and bailiffs, aud the soldiers behind
l hem. The widow has nothing te de but
te bow her head and submit aud pray that
some iclief may ceme te her from some
whcic. IJut wheic is it te ceme lrem .'
Net lrem my lord, for, as 1 said, he has
his private expenses te meet ; net from
his agent, for he was selected for his es
pecial fondness for pitching women and
childicn into the street ; net from Eng
land, for Eugland, leeks upon every coun
try it has anything te de with as either te
be plundeicd or traded with ; net from the
1 essanhy about them, for they arc in the
same beat with the widow.
What became of her finally I don't
knew. I am altogether tee soft hearted
in st.iv anv lenirth of time where such
things are te be seen every half-hour.
If I ever leaned toward the doctrines
taught by the Univcrsalists, a contempla
tion of the system of Uantryism has en
tirely and completely convinced me that
they aie erroneous. If there is net a lake
or lire and brimstone, a very wide, and
very deep, and very het one, there ought
te be, and when the British IIouse or
Lords meet there, there will always be a
quorum. Aud ray lord will lift up his
eyes te the Widow Flauagan, aud beg Ter
a drop of water te cool Jris parched tongue.
But he -n-en't get it. He doesn't decrve
it.
It is impossible te make an American
PA., SATLKDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1881.
comprehend the width, depth aud breadth
or the misery until he has seen it with his
own eyes.' Ne ether man's ces are geed
for anj thing iu this matter, for the reason
that nothing parallel exists en the Amei t
can side of the water. And, besides this, the
writer:, fur the stage and of general litera
ture have most woefully misrepresented
the Irish mau aud woman, aud teiy much
te Ips aud her disadvantage.
The Irishman of the stage and uetel is
alwajs a lellicking, happy-go lucky
sort of reckless fellow, with a short tailed
coat, led vest, and corduroy tieuscrs,
woolen stockings and stout biegaus, with
a bottle of whisky peeping out of his
neckct, a black thorn shillelah in his fist,
iilwajs icady for a dauce or a light, or for
love-making, or any ether pleasaut em
ployment. There rs always ou his he-ul
a rather bad hat, worn jauntily, heweer,
and though he may be occasionally lather
short el feed, he manages alwajs te get
enough te be fat, sleek aud rosy. Aud then
he always has a laugh en his lace, a joke
ou his lrps, and he gees thieu;:h life with
a peipetual " huiroe."
And Katy, she is always pieseutcd te us
clad in a short woolen gown, her shapely
legs inclesed iu warm red bteckings, and
she has a bright led Jiandkeichiet about
her neck, with geed comfortable shoes,
and a coquettish straw hat buxom giil
who can dance down any lad within ten
miles, andean " hurroe' as well as Pat,
and a tritlc better.
The Irish priest is always represented te
us as a fat, sleek, jelly fellow who is con
stantly giving his people geed advice, but
who, nevertheless, is ready te sing " The
Ciuiskecu Lawn" iu a "neb, mellow
eice," before a splendid lire iu the house
of his paiishieneis, with a glass or peteen
in one hand and a pipe iu the ether, the
company joining jellily in the cheius. He
is supposed te live in luxuiy lrem the s:t s:t
peistilien of his people, and te hae about
as easy a life as any man 011 earth.
All these arc lies.
The Irishman is the saddest man 0:1 the
&111 face of the glebe. Yeu may ti.ivel a
week and never see a smile or hear a
laugh. Utter and abject niisciy. starva
tion, and helplessness arc nei conducive of
merriment.
The Irish mau has net only no fchwt
tailed coat, but he censidei.s himself fbitu
11 ite if he has auy coat at all. He h is
what by ceuitesy may be called heuaeii-,
but the vest is a myth. He has no com cem com
feitablo woolen stockings nor is he pos
sessed of the regulation stage-shoes. He
does net sing, dance or laugh, for tie has
no place te sing, laugh and dance in. He
is a moving pyramid of rags. A man who
cuts beg all day fiein daylight te daik,
whose diet consists et a few potatoes twice
a day, is net much in the humor for danc
ing all night, even were theic a place for
him te dance in. Aud, as fur jollity, a man
with a laud agent watching him like a
haw k te sce hew much he he is improving
his laud, with the charitable intent of lais-
ing the rent if by any possibility he cau i
.sciew it out of him, is net in the mood te j
laugh, sing, dance, or "hurroe." One 1
might as well think of laughing at a
funeial. Iieland ir. one perpetual luueial. ,
The ghastly pieccsiiun is constantly pass-!
iug. '
There is unquestionably a vast fund of j
humor iu the Irishman, which would be,
delightful could it have proper vent. Yeu
hear farut tones et it as it is ; but it i iu
the miner key, and vciy sad. It always
has a flavor of rack rent in it, a tar,te of
staivatieu, a suggestion el eviction and
death by cold aud hunger by the leadaidc.
It isn't cheerful. 1 had much rather have
the Irishmen silent than te hear this lcin
naul of jocularity which is always streaked
w ith bleed.
The Irish niil is always comely, and,
properly clothed .and fed, would be beau-I
til1.1I. Still M10 is cemciy. Irish land-
leidisnr has net been sutlicient te ue.stiey
her beauty, though it has done its best.
But she has no gown of woolen stull ; a
cotton slip without underclothing of auy
kind makes up her costume. The coiu ceiu coiu
fei table stocking and stout shoes, and the
red kcrehicr about her neck aie se mauy
libels upon Irish landlerdism. Were my
giil, he would immediately laise the rent
upon her father, aud confiscate these
clothes. And he would keep en raising
the rent till he was certain that shoes and 1
stockings would be forever impossible. 1
Neither does she dance Pat down 1
at rustic balls, fn- a most ex
cellent reason : there, are no balls ; aud
besides when tits has cut and diied a don
key lead of peat, and walked beside that ,
donkey barefooted ur the cold mud t.vclve
J . . . - 1 .1.1 i. .i ..,. 1
miles ami uacn again, aim eum mat icau
for sixpence, she rs net veiy much in the
liiimni for dauciuir down any one. On the
contrary, she is mighty glad te get into
her wretched bed of dried lcacs and pull
ever her the potato sack which constitutes 1
her solelcevcriug, and sejtircd te sleep by ,
.- ., - -. :.. .1... .... . t..!,.t.l
the giuntrugs or 1110 pigs m mc; ""
cabin, forget landlords and rent, aud go
off into the laud of happiuess, which te
her is America. She finds in sleep sur
case of sorrow ; and, besides, it relreshea
her te the degree of walking barefooted
tin eunh the mud twenty-four miles en
the morrow, te sell another lead efpe.it ler
sixpence, that she may pay mere money
te my lord, whose town house in Lou Leu
duuand whose mistresses in Paris re
quire a great deal of money. Cham
paguc and the delicacies of the reason are
always expensive ; and my lord's appe
tite, and the appetite of hi., wile and
mistresses, and his childicn, legtti natc
and illegitimate, aie delicate. Ck.ulj
Katy is in no humor for dancing. She
has her share te contribute te all lln.se
objects. And se she eats her meal
of potatoes 01 stii about (she never has
both at once), and gees into sleep aud
dreams.
As te the priest theic ncer was a
wilder delusion than exists in the minds
or the American people concerning him.
1 was at the houses, or rather lodgings, of
agieat many of them, but one (.amplt
wil1 suffice.
Half way between Ivuimaie and rvillai
ncy, iu a wild, desolate country. lics one
of these par islr priests, who aie. supposed
te inhabit luxurious houses, and te live
o-nip-neiiclv. anil te be pcitutuallv singing
"The Cririskccn Lawn," with a pi;e in
one hand and a glass of peteen in the
ether.
He is a magnificent mau. In face and
figure he is the exact picture of Salmen P.
Chase, one of the greatest of Americans.
Where genius and intellect mean some
thing, and whcic great ability finds great
rewards, he would lrae been one of the
most emmcut of men. A mau of great
lecraiug, of wonderful intuitions, of cool,
cleir judgment, of great nerve, and un
bounded heart, he would, were he te come
te America aud drop his priestly robes, be
president of a great railroad corporation,
or a senator, or anything else he chose te
k. ni- -i..ii ;u lm iii TiKiiiitil ' Tlis anart-
ments comprise a bcdioem just large
enough te held a eiypwi- bed, and a
study in a better elass farm house, for
which he pays rent the same as anybody
else does. His fleer is unc.ui cted, and
the entire furniture of his room, leaving
out his library, would net invoice- $10.
His parish is one of the wildest and bleak
est in Treland. and is twenty five miles
UC. .Ltl&U UI.U J AAW ... ..- .
long aiid eighteen wide.
New understand that this man is
lawyer, the friend, the guide and direc
tor in tempeial as well as spiritual mat
ters, or the eutire population of this dis
trict. If a husband aud wife quarrel, it
is his duty te hear and decide. If a
tenant gets into trouble with his land
lore, he is the go-between te arrange it.
In short, every trouble, great and small,
in the parish is referred te him, and he
must act. He is their lawyer as well as
their priest. He is their everything. He
supplies te them the intelligence that the
most infernal government en earth has
denied them.
But this is a small part of his duties.
He has te conduct services at all the
chapels in this stretch of country. He has
te watch ever the morals of all the people.
But this is net all. Ne matter at what
hour of the night, ue matter what the
condition et" the weather, the summons te
the bedside or the dying mat: te adminis
ter the last sacraments or the church must
b.i obeyed. It may be te de this requires
a l'.de en horseback of twenty miles iu a
blindiug storm, but it must be done.
Every child must be christened, every
death bed must be seethed, every sorrow
mitigated by the only comfort this suffer
ing people have faith in their church.
What de you suppose this magnificent
man gets fei all this ? The largest income
he ever received in his life was 100, which
reduced te American money, ameuuts te
exactly $481. And out of this he has e
pay his lent, his feed, his clothing, the
keeping of his heisc, and all that remains
gees in char lty te the sutli 1 i 0 sick every
cent of it.
When the father dies, his nephews and
neices will net lind veiy goedjpickiugfrom
what is left, I assure you.
"Why de you,"' I asked, " a man ca
pable of doing se much in the world, stay
and de this enormous work for no
thing ?"
" I was called te it, was the answer :
" what would thcte peer people de with
out me '."
That was all. Here is a m;.u capable
or any thing, who deliberately sacrifices
acaieei, sacrifices comfeit, sacrifices the
life he was fitted for, sinks his identity,
foregoes fame, reputation, everything for
the sake of a sullering peeple !
" 1 was called te de it ; what would
these peer people de without me?"
I am a vciy vigorous Protestant, and
have no especial Ieve for the Catholic
chinch; but I shall esteem myself espec
ially feitunatc if I can make a lecerd iu
this world that will give me a place iu the
next within gunshot of where this man
will be placed. I am net eapable of mak
ing the sacrifices for my fellows that he is
deii g I wish te Heaven I was. I found
by actual demonstration why the Irish se
love thcr priests. They would be in a still
wei.se way, if possible, without them.
Tint slight Tickling in the Threat and dis
position te slight C0114I1 may be the precursor
t cin el soil liiiu uultss you take l)i.
null's eiigh'-yiup which never disappoint-'.
Pi ice 2.1 cents.
m
ln igeialing feed ter the brain and neics
is vh.it we need 111 these days eMiish and
weny. P.irkei's Gingei-Tenic lesteres the
1t.1l cnei gic-s, and hi nigs geed health quicken
than aiiMluny y en can use. Tribune, bee nil
m it 1st 1111 lit., nl-lindced&w mv
eting tlie Kllccts.
It. Glblw, el r.iillale, X. Y., wiiles: " Hear-i-:g
0111 llmdeek Meed 15iltei-s taeiably
spoken of. I as induced te w ateli their cllect-,
and tiiul that m chronic diseases et the bleed,
li 1 and kidnevs, j our bitters have been sig
nally 111.11 Ned w'ltli success. 1 have 'ascd them
mys'elt with best results, ler teipitlity et the
liver; and 111 cisflefu liiciiilel mine suller
ing Hern diojey. the ellcct was marvelous."
Pi ice f I. Tei-s lie at II. 15. Cochran's ding
stei e. l!7N 01 th Queen street, Lancaster.
' A blmrt ICead te Health.
'le all who aie sulTeiiiig from boils, ulcciy,
scielula, cai bunde", or ethci obstinate dis-
I cisesel the bleed and skin, acenise et liui-
j deck Meed Itittens w ill be found te be a sheit
cechnin'silnn
Lancaster.
loidte health. Pi ice fi. J or h:iic at 11. j.
stele, 1J7 rteilli ;ucen sueei.
Jacob .Marteil, et I. measter, . ., s.ij
'.our Spiing IHosseiii works well ler ceiy-111111"-
jeu recommend it; mj self, wife. ami
children lueall used it, and you can't lind a
laalthier laiuily 111 New etk bt.ite October
"1 ISSl. Puce Till cents. Fer sale at II. 15. Coeh Ceeh
l.tn's di ug store, 1 57 X 01 tli ifueen street, Lan-
l.tstll.
VLOTJUTiti.
If ALU
ei'ksim;
H. GERHART'S
Tailoring Establishment,
1 l tiie- I.AKl. fc I' AbSOKTMEXl"et line
1 ! SUITING,
OVERCOATING,
IMNTALOONING
1 lneuglit le tlie City of J.ancn'-tei.
Prices as Lew as the Lewest
All Goods Warranted as Represented!
H. GERHART'S
NEW STORE,
Ne. 6 East King Street,
(t'.cjrtiix;. xv.
j
tJ, B.
Merchant Tailors and Clothiers,
2-1 CENTRE SQUARE.
Oil! Ai'-OltlllCllt Ot
CLOTHING
ren
JIKS, K0YS AND YOUTHS
TOR
1-ALL AND WINTER,
I-t I.ucr
I'necs tli"
mid mere -v.rried than ever Ijcleie.
ion e-it. Gi c 113 ii eall.
D. B. Hostetter & Sen,
24 CENTRE SQUARE,
;ier m
1
the'a - ljd
LAKCASrEI'tPA.
itRt
OMUDliUAbS, aiUKKAY & CO.
MARKET & NINTH STS.,
SNOSGMSS, MURRAY & CO,
PHILADELPHIA.
DRESS CLOTHS.
WINTER CLOAKTNGS.
SEAL SKIN CLOTHS.
SEAL and SILK PLUSHES.
LADIES' ULSTER CLOTHS.
CHILDREN'S SACQUEINGS.
BOY'S STHTUGS and OVERCOATIMS.
MEN'S SUITINGS and TROUSERINGS. '
BILLIARD CLOTHS.
CARRIAGE and UPHOLSTERY CLOTHS.
FLANNELS IfOK UNDEKWEAK.
1JEAVERTEENS AND CORDUROYS.
r ask & co. LANE C
LANE & CO.,
Ne. 24 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER, PA.,
DEALEKS IN
FOREiei AID DOMESTIC DRY GOODS.
JUST Ul'KNEO A .SPLENDID LINE OF
LADIES' COATS AND COATINGS,
VERY CJrIAP.
LADIES' UNDEKWL'AK in all grades.
GENTLEMEN'S UNDEIIWEAH, iu Hetl and White Goods.
IJLANKETS, in great variety.
FEATHERS, Steam Cured.
CARPETS and QUEENSWAIIE.
HOUSE and LAI' ULANKETS, IJOLTING CLOTHS. &e.
i-peeial induci'iiie'iit
JAMJAItl 1, lty-.
, in ! in1 nu: .i v e
Jacob M. Marks.
Jehn A.
uevsn vutiNisitisu uoens.
H
eusi:riii:Niiiiis:.
-GO
FLINN & WILLSON'S,
-mm:-
Fuiues and Suns of all KMs.
Ju-t iteeivnl l.ixn Ai::- of I-'I.OOK Oil. UI.OTJI Hum JS cents per yard up.
CHANDELIERS.
COM IT I. n
LINK OK IIOUShFUKMSjIllNi; dOODS FOK TIIK rAlil h&AftU.-s.
4-C.ill and evuiiliii- eui
-tee I.,
FLINN & WILLSON,
152 & 154 North Queen Street.
vt. umii i:ict
TOON 1.
AKMM.O.
I. litest, t inest and
CHANDELIERS
EVKU SbEN IX 1.AXC.YSTEK,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
GAS GLOBES CHEAP.
TJX 1'LATK AND PLUMBER'S SUPPLIES.
JOHN L. AENOLD,
Nes. 11, 13 & 15 EAST ORANGE STREET, LANO ASTER, PA.
!:ir2-tnl
WISH
S. CLAY MILLEE,
Wines, Brandies, Bins, Olfl Rye Whiskies, &c,
Ne. 33 PENS SQUABE, LANCASTER, PA.
GIBSON'S WHISKY BOTTLED A SPECIALTY.
HUUNlTUJtB.
TIT1 MIOt'K IOB IHK
FALL TRADE.
Isfemplclf, jctlamaddlns constantly te it.
andeu will ilnd my V oei.n wy uiucli
ciende-d witli tiie -
BEST GOODS AT TIIE LOWEST
POSSIBLE PRICES.
Wc me M crowded that it W luthur dillicult
te s-liew Reeds, but we vi 111 try and oiteine
t!iiJ by the be-it uttuntien.
Older-, ter
PIEK AND MANTEL GLASSES
filled
pilcc
at the vciv-liorteet notice and at lowest
., ut
KL'IIMTrKi:. AND PICTIKi:
WAKEKOOMJf,:
FKAME
l" IZAbT Kl HTKEKT.
WALTER A. HEINITSH.
c-iil-3nnl
Price Twe CenK
aoeint.
d-tre te inaki- . 1adlt.1l fliangc in -tek ly
Charles.
Jehn B. Reth.
JJOU
SKMJKNISHINO.
'1 u-
Ne trouble- te show goedrf.
f vvri.ii.s.
J
OllN I.. AKXOLP.
Che ipe--,t fcteel-: et
ASIt I.liiVORS.
t(li..
B.
II. .MARTIN,
Wholesale and Ketail Dealt r In all kinds et
T.tJMIiKK. AND COAL.
f j. 3 ytetlU Water and Prince
,,St; Ibire Irnen. lancwter. nS-lyd
. COHO & WILEl,
:i.1n NORTH WATER ST., Lnnetuter, V.,
Wholesale anl UcUiIl Deale-rs In
LUMBER AND GOAL.
Connection With the Telephonic exchange,
Uranch Office :
Xe. '20 UliMRK 5UAK1..
JeW8-lyd
pi) TO
REILLY & KELLER
GOOD, CLEAN FAMILY COAL.
Alse, Hay and Straw by the bale or ten.
Fanners and ethers In want et Superfei
Manure will lind it te their advantage te call
Yard, UarrlHbnrscPIke.
Office. 20 East Chestnut street, f aglj-..