Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, December 12, 1881, Image 1

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    - -5
elmtfa$teS
Volame XVliI-.Nii.L6.
LANCASTER, PA., MONDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1881.
Price Twe Carts
.JOHN WAXAJfAKHR'a VJ'EAT HOLIDAY SALE.
JOHN WANAMAKBR
THE GREAT
HOLIDAY SALE
of Philadelphia,
AT THE GRAND DEPOT,
111 both the Main Building and the two new annexes,
when FIVE ACRES OF FLOOR SPACE AND GALLERIES will be thrown open te the public
for the marvelously beautiful exhibition of dry goods, fancy goods, ladies' dresses, and houso heuso house
furnishinffs of every description.
Vienna, Paris, Berlin and Switzerland have poured in beautiful thing.", for Christmas, and
the new toy department ceverinjj a half aero let is
LIKE FAIRY LAND.
All told, the present stock offers our customers a selection from almost two million dollars'
worth, of goods.
The ladies' suits and coats and the Fur Department occupy the new buildiner directly en the
corner of Thirteenth and Chestnut.
The ladies', gents' and children.'s hosiery, gloves and gents' furnishing goods occupy the three
steres (thrown into one) en the west side of Chestnut Street entrance.
The Immense Windows On Chestnut Street,
and the arcade entrance, with its splendid displays of Christinas things,
Will he iUnminated with Electric Light until
10 o'clock every night,
Mail orders have our careful attention. We are organized te attend te twelve hundred
letters daily.
JOHN WANAMAKEB,
Grand DepOt Thirteenth, Market and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
rVEKS Jsr KATIirON, . "JLTYISKS .V KATHI'ON, Jl YKKS & UATUFUS,
FINE MERCHANT TAILORS and CLOTHIERS,
EMPLOY THE FIVE BEST OPTTEHS IN THE CITY.
READY MADE CLOTHING.'
If we. undertake te describe em FINE ASSORTMENT in these goods il would consume mere than our sliuoef spaceautl
mere of your patience te read it than is allowable. Suflice it te .say wc have every thing, from the 10 SUIT we have told you
about, te ,'the FINEST CLOTHING a gentleman requires.
BY THOSE WHO HAVE DEALT WITH US OUR GOODS ARE CONCEDED TO BE
THE BEST IN LANCASTER CITY OR COUNTY.
CHINA AM ULAHSWAHL.
H
IUU & MAKTIN.
CHINA HALL.
Opening another New Let el
HOLIDAY GOODS
IX
Ha viland's China.
BOHEMIAN GLASSWARE,
FANCY GOODS.
A new line el DECORATED CIlAMIlKlt
SKTS, TEA anl DINNER SETS.
All these wares were relucted wltlitlic great
vl care as te Style, e uality and Decoration.
Ilulerc selecting your
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
examine our very large stick.
HIGH &. MAKTIN,
Ne. 15 East Kins Street.
MIMICAL.
OCtlKKS
Renowned Cough Syrup.
A pleasant, sale, speedy and sure remedy ler
Colds. Coughs, Hoarseness, Asthma, Influen
za. Soreness t tlie Threat and Chest, Bron
chitis, Whooping Cough, Spitting or Uloed, In
flammation e: the Lungs and all Diseases el"
the Chest and Air Passages.
This valuable preparation combines all the
medicinal virtues of these articles which long
experience lias proved te possess the most
sate and cfllcicnt qualities for the cure of all
kinds of lung diseases.
TRICE, 25 Cents. Prepared only and sold by
CHAS. A. LOCHER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DKUGGIST,
Ne. 9 East Kin? Street, Lancaster.
WILL INAUGUKATE ON
MONDAY, DECEMB
CLOTHING.
USON JtlTTXKS.
"HON ISITTKIUJ.
I
IRON BITTERS!
A TRUE TONIC.
IKON lUTTISltSaruhighly'rcceiiimcudcd !nr all diseases requiring a certain and cltl
cienl tonic; especially
INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OF APPE
TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY, &c.
It enriches the bleed, strengthens the iuiicIim, and gives new lite tf tlin nerves. It acts
like a charm en the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptom, such as Tailing lltt
Feed, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. The only Iren Preparation that will
net Dlacken the tnelii or give headnche. Sold by all druggists. Write ler the A It C Heek, 32
pp. et useful and amusing reading sent free.
BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY,
123-lytlAw BALTIMORE, MD.
Fer Sale at COOHRAN'S DRUG STOR3, 137 and 139 North Queen
street, Lancaster.
l'LUMIWR'S
TOllN I.. AKNOLD.
Largest, Finest and Cheapest Stock el
CHANDELIERS
EVEU SEEN IN LANCASTER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
GAS GLOBES CHEAP.
TIN PLATE AND PLUMBER'S SUPPLIES.
-:e:-
JOHN L. ARNOLD,
Nes. 11, 13 & 15 BAST ORANGE STREET, LANCASTER, PA.
rapra-ud
Eli 5th,
HON K1TTKHS.
SURE APPETISER.
HVl'VLIKS.
TOJIN L. AKNOLD. "
Lancaster JtUclIicjcnccr.
MONDAY EVENING, DEC. 12, 1881.
DEATH IN THE FLAMES,
VIENNA'S AWFUL HOLOCAUST.
NEARLY A THOUSAND LIVES LOST-
AN AL'DIESCK C'AUUMT IN A TiiiM",
T!t Railroaders Roasted Near i ittbbtuIi.
It is new feared that the total number of
victims of the fire iu the Vienna King
theatre en Thursday night may icach
1,000. All of the pei iei users, except three
of the chorus, were saved. Among the
missing are three professor."5, a member
of Parliament, and young Count Sgis
iiiuud Fcstctics, and several ether stu
dents from a private military college. Ne
American students are reported missing.
A man who was in the theatre when the lira
broke out says that as seen as the llamas
burst through the curtain a terrible cry of
terror rang out from the auditorium.
ft very one present sprang up anil hastened
toward the exit. In the corrideis the
blackest darkness prevailed. AVith many
ethers he tried te make his way in the dark
and caught held of the coat of a person
before him, while his own coat was held
by a string of ethers behind. Thus they
groped their way te the stairs, where also
it was pitch dark. All fell en ene another,
but finally they reached the Grand Leggia.
They heard the piercing shrieks of the less
feituurite ones, who were either crushed te
death or sufl'ecateil by the smeke and
fumes. These who could net reach the
stairs hastened te the windows of the
Leggia. Dense crowds struggled together,
these behind urging these in Irent te
"Spring out, or we shall all die !" Seme
uiitile the spring and were caught by the
firemen below. Women were this first te
jump. Filty perrens were iu this way
saved. On the arrival of the fire brigade it was
found impossible te penetrate beyond the
first tier of the theatre, the rush of suiTo suiTe
cating smoke and air extinguishing the
lamps and torches. The firemen letircd
under a momentary impression that, be
cause their shouts were net answered,
there were no mere pcople in the theatre.
These who escaped en the first alarm, how
ever, seen undeceived them. Anether
dibit was then made te penetrate the
parts of the thcatic which were net actu
ally blazing. In the narrow passage be
tween the second and third galleries a
mass of corpses was discovered, some se
closely interlocked that it was hardly pos
sible te part them. The finst man dis
covered was get out alive, but all the rest
were dead. These were persons who had
lest their way m cousciptcuce of the turn
ing oil of the gas, which it is new ascer
tained was done by some irresponsible per
son, with a view te prevent an explosion.
Some men were found with their hands
grasping each ether's threats. Subsequent
investigations showed that iu sonic cases
persons, finding escape hopeless, had com
mitted suicide. It is stated by survivors
that women were seen te threw their chil
dren from the gal'eiius. into the pit. At
the time of the outbreak of the fi.tip.es the
nailery especially allotted te ladies was
full. About 10 o'clock the gasemeter ex
ploded, the reef fell, and the place was
reduced te a wreck.
The hall of the hospital wheic the bodies
arc laid out presents agonizing scenes. The
official list gives the number of the miss
ing at 917. It is feared that as the debris
is removed hundreds of bodies will b
found in the bleckcil-up passages. The
captain of the lire brigade states that all
inside the theatsc is a heap of human
bones andeharicd remains. Frank iu i'.iw
lik, daughter of the well-known member
member of the Chamber of Deputies -who
succeeded in escaping from the theatre
whilst urging the people outside te attempt
te rescue these inside, was treated as mad
by the police, and forcibly made te ckise
her importunities, the guards declaring
that everybody had been rescued.
Further inquiries as te the origin of the
lire establish the fact that the person;? in
trusted with the duties of firemen en the
stage ran efiall'iighted at the lust blaze.
One even' tumbled headlong from the
' Hies" te the stage fleer, and another,
who had charge of the gas, fearing that an
explosion might occur, turned off the gas
at the meter, plunging the theatre into
total datkuess until it Oceania illuminated
with the .blaze of the conflagration. The
reserve of petroleum lamps placed
in the thrcatre six mouths before by
elder of the police, had net. '.icon
lighted ou this occasion, and piebabiyhad
never been lighted after the fit si month of
the order. There was the v.ire gauze cur
tain ready te be let down in such si case
of emergency, and supposed te be attended
te by a special mechanic well drilled in
his duties. Had this curtain been lower
ed it is probable that every person in the
theatre would have escaped. 15ut the at
tendant lied and saved his own life at.
the expense of the many hundreds for
whom Vienna is mourning te-day.
The generally accepted theory of the
origin of the fire is the accidental upset
ting of a small spirit lamp. The first act
of the ' Cente d' Heffman " leprcscnts
the students' beer lieu.se, in which a lamp
is used. This ret fire te one side of the
scenes, and the liames extended in a mo
ment te the Hies. Anether version is that
the scenery was ignited by a spark from
the electric machinery. The former ver
sion is the mere likely one. Director
Hchncsbcrger, who steed upon the stage,
was the first one te notice the fire. In a
moment after the flies were wrapped in
flames and the network of weed, ropes
and canvas was burning iike tinder. The
people en the stage were stupefied with
fear at first, and they speedily took te
flight, iu tlie mesb terrible confusion,
toward the ladies' dressing rooms en the
left of the stage, where a small staircase
led te the Hehenstaufengassc.
Iu a moment the curtain flew up, and
the draft blew it hither and thither until,
like a fiery tongue, it darted back and
forth from the auditorium te the stage '
The fire became the master of the King
theatre. ''Fire ! fire ! The King theatre
is en fire?" was the cry that went from
mouth te mouth en the Itingstrasse. The
flames were already buneting through the
reef, and cries, .such as Vienna never
heard before, filled the air. They seemed
net like the erics et human beings, but
such weful accents as can be heard only in
the death struggle. The scene was inde
scribable. All these inside the fated
building were pushing their way toward
tkc street, which was densely crowded at
all points. The audience from the theatre
struggled and crushed each ether in the
peristyle and foyer, and confusion reigned
supreme. Suddenly erics were heard from
the windows of " the theatre leac.iug
te the ring. The balcony ever
the entrance was seen emptied, and
the cries of these at the windows and of
these from within the theatre were awful,
and swelled louder and louder.
"Women were the first te jump. It w
terrible te see hew one after the ether
made- the leap through the air. Then
men followed. Then again women. An
eKI Kcntlemcu insisted that two boys
should jump first. One of them refused
te ;;e. lie caught held with his hands of
the window bar. llis lingers were trodden
en, ami he fell into the street. Fifty per
sons were in this way saved. In the thick
crowd
strange forms appeared.
Naked,
half naked, strangely dressed people.
They were artists. One of them were
nothing but a white under jacket and a
powdered wig. A second ene did net even
wear as much as that The lady, dressed
in a student's costume of red velvet, who
had te sing the part of the student Nico
las, was followed by another one in an
airy night robe. The cafes in the neigh
borhood wcie changed into dressing rooms
and warming chambers, the police station
into a hospital and a death chamber.
Persons who have seen the dead in the
fourth gallery describe the bodies as all
lyiug as they had fallen forward, back back
weid, upward bound together in con
vulsive, clinging masses. They were un
able te leave the gallery, because the doers
opened inward. liven had they escaped
death here, it is scarcely possible that the'
would have escaped iu the passages and
nairew stairways, plunged iu total dark
ness and Idled with suf locating fumes.
Death came te them quickly, however.
Te leek at the dead bodies in the Morgue
and at the Krankcuhaus tells mere of the
terrible death which the victims met than
the report that any cyc-witi- ses has yet
given. Seme appear te have died from
suffocation alone. Twe beautiful girls are
there with their faces scarcely discolored,
looking as if they were only asleep.
Anether youthful female figure lies there,
only one charred stump of her neck re
maining, while her body and lower cx
tiemities are untouched. The linen of her
underclothing is as spotless white as
when, en the afternoon of the fatal day,
she dressed herself for the play. Her
death is described easily. Caught iu the
dense, surging crowd the flames descended
upon them all, charing and consuming only
the heads with the liorce heat. Most of the
better preserved bodies show ene arm up
lifted as if struggling for freedom, while
the ether hand is closely pressed te the
mouth te exclude the destroying breath of
the fire. Others have the heads und upper
part of the bodies without disfigurement,
while the feet and legs are charred off.
Other victims arc represented by the trunk
alone, the heads, feet and legs missing en
tirely. These who were exposed te the
flames are as dark as Africans, but with
the form and features often faithfully pre
served. The ether bodies retain the form of the
last desperate struggle, the features ex
pressing the final cramp of agony. Others
are fair women, some with diamond rings
still glittering en their fingers. The only
objects by which ihey cap possibly be
recognized have been trampled te death
and then paiily consumed by the fire.
Seme have their skulls crushed in and
limbs distorted and broken. Frem ethcis
the bowels protrude, a horrifying sight.
Many bodies lack their hands or feet,
w hich were tern off hi the struggle for
life. One beautiful young lady lest both
arms. Seme corpses were crushed almost
flat. Among tint bodies found were these
of a mother and child seated embracing
each ether en the steps leading te the sec
ond gallery. The stairs te the third ami
forth galleries were found barricaded with
such amass of overcoats umbrellas, jack
ets, shawls and bonnets that the workmen
had te clear these away before they could
proceed te the left side.
A lady wiie was in the third row of the
parquet at the time of the disaster says :
"I was just about te take out my eneia
glass fieni its case when suddenly 1 re
marked thai the curtain was driven out
violently toward me. A sheet of fire
poured out immediately after ever the
stabs. I grasped my lady friend by the
arm ami hurried toward the central en
trance ; but iu a moment all the lights
were extinguished and we were in com
plete darkness. Only by keeping a firm
held of the railing were we enabled te
gr.ipe our way down the stairway. Sud
denly te my horror I found that my friend
no longer clung te roe. I screamed eat
her name and te my delight I was answer
ed. She caught held of me again and wc
wet e crushed out through the darkness
with the livimr mass of fugitives and
saved."
A yeumr Hungarian student who was in
the third gallery, says that no sooner did
the fire break into the auditorium than the
air became insufferably stifling. lie man
ag d te escape, but he saw scores fall down
suffocated before- they reached the stairs,
and he only escaped by finding his way
quickly te the window of the upper loggia.
Comparatively few people effected their
escape from the two upper galleries
through the pitch dark passage. Many
fell at the narrow winding stairway lead
ing from one gallery te the ether. Iu the
narrow circular stairway leading from the
second te the third gallery thirty bodies
weie found fallen together.
IIURNT IN' THE SUANTV.
Hew the Kailread Workmen Lest Their
Lives.
The railroad shanty, sevcu miles from
Pittsburgh, iu which about a dozen men
lest their lives by fire ou Saturday morning
before daylight, was merely a temporary
structure, meant for the accommodation
of workmen. It was owned by Martin
Joyce, a contractor, and the men were
bearded by Hugh McCunc, assisted by his
wife and servant girls. The building was
located at Cut Reck, en the Pittsburgh
& Lake Krie railroad. It w;vs about thirty
feet wide and liity feet in length, and con cen
stiuctcd of sixteen feet beards, placed en
end. It had a beard reef, with very steep
pitch. On the ground lioer were a dinimr
room and kitchen, separated by a parti
tion. Above was a large left, made by
tiie sloping reef. The stairs leading te
the left were little better than a ladder
4)iul were located just at the side of the
aoer leading lrem the tuning room 10 inc
kitchen.
This left was a regular death-trap. It
was here that the men slept. Forty
tin ce of theni sat down te supper, aud it
is supposed that they were all in the left
whea the cry of fire was raised. They
slept in bunks. There was net a window
in the left. Twe openings covered with
wooden slides were cut in the reef, one at
each cud of the dark place, but they were
tightly closed at night and the men weut
te bed without light. The left was a reg
ular tinder-box. Straw was used for bed
ding, and it was very dry and inflammable.
The fire was caused by the explosion of a
lamp. Between 2 and U o'clock Mr. Mc
Cunc, the bearding house keeper, arose
and kindled a fire in the kitchen stove.
He left a lighted lamp en a table near the
deer leading te the dining room and went
te arouse his wife and servant girls.
While he was gene the explosion occurred
aud in an instant the dining room was
filled with flames. Mr. McCune succeed
ed in escaping with his wife and girls, but
could net de mere than call upon these up
stairs te escape for their lives. In an
ether moment the flames had enveloped
the stairway, thus cutting off all means of
escape for the deemed men above, except
through small openings at cither end, and
from these the sliding doers had te be re
moved. The flames seized upon the straw and
spread with great rapidity. It was only
these who were nearest te the openings
who could make their escape. Ferms in a
semi-nude condition could be seen strug
gling iu the stifling smoke. Seme of the
occupants of the left succeeded in squeez
ing through the opening, seme with their
underclothes en fire. The ethers rushed
frantically about the room until the smeke
suffocated them and their voices were
stifled in death. The survivors
groaned and writhed in pain and
shivered in the frosty air of the early
morning as they were borne off. As seen
as pessible word was sent te ether beard
ing houses along the line of the work, and
physicians were summoned from the
neighborhood and city. Special engines
were sent down the Pittsburgh & Lake
Eric read, but in the meanwhile the vic
tims were provided with such clothing as
could be obtained. The seriously injured
were brought te the depot en the Seuth
Side and thence removed te AVest Penn
hospital, while theso who were Irs. scii scii
eusly burned were removed te the hotel of
Marthi Joyce, ou Penn avenue. The scene
was terrible beyond description. The dead
bodies were se blackened and charred
that several of them were unrecognizable.
The odor of scorched llcsh pervaded the
locality. Iu a heap iu one corner of the
ruins were the charred remains of six men
who had evidently succumbed while en
deavering te escape through an opening iu
ths reef. Among these was the body of
Patrick Feley, ene of the fercmcu. A
coroner arrived en the scene about neon
and took charge of the corpses. A peer
woman, the wife of ene of the meii who
lest his life, was unable te distinguish
which of the charred corpses was her hus
band. Nearly all of the victims were un
married men. It is said that net mere
than four or five of them lcave families te
mourn their less.
Reports arc contradictory as te the ori
gin of the fire. The women saved say it
started from the lamp, but ethers think
the fire preceded the explosion. 'J After
the lamp was lighted the explosion came,"
said another survivor. " Forty of us slept
iu one room, in bunks, and cre wc could
awake the flames crackled about us. Some
of us jumped through the windows and
rushed down the narrow stairway without
Hethiug. The shrieks and yells of pain
attracted ethers te the spot, but within
twenty-live minutes the shanty was m
ashes and a sickening stench came fieni
the remains of the victims. Many mere
were badly bunted aud there will be sev
eral mero deaths soeu.:'
The shanty steed at the opening of a
green hollow, and nothing remained but
the blackened joists and a part of a deer.
The site of the builbing was strewn with
kitchen aud dining-room fundi ure mero
than half consumed, kitchen utensils,
shreds of clothing, human bones, strips of
crisped llesh aud skulls. The latter were
found iu different places. Where the
north end of the building has steed, en
portions of a partially consumed straw
bed, were the remains of seven victims,
piled up iu such confusion as te give the
beholder an idea of the horrible agony the
victims must have suffered before losing
consciousness. This bed was located un
der one of the openings and it was evident
from the position of the bodies that the
original occupants having escaped ethers
had sought te llec through the. opening,
but had become hopelessly entangled and
suffocated. They were burned te unrec
ognizable shape aud when the lloer of the
left gave way the charred remains dropped
te the ground below.
Wii'Mi one knows a geed thing il should be
told; and wc de knew from experience that
Dr. UuU'.s Cough Syrup is the best remedy ler
Coughs and Celd:; we ever used. It only rests
i" cents a bottle.
Wm. McCartney, KS Lloyd Street, Ihitude,
N V. It'll aud sprained his ankle. Ills em
ployer. II. Andersen, ai Main Street, procured
some Themas' Eeleetric Oil. and hesiy.s that a
lew applications enabled him te go te work as
usual. Fer sale at II. 15. Cochran's drug store,
l."7 North IJuccn street, Lancaster.
"Vi."
Jesh IliHiii-t s.ir - "Than: ain't no pi in
antral liistry that lias hceii et mere, and that
mere oil than apple pi. and no medicine kan
euro indi;t'.stiiii and biliousness hat' se well lis
Spring Ulossei .." I'lice .r.() cents. Fer sale at
li. IS. Cochran's drug store, l."!7 N'erlli Queen
street, l,ai'.;.iatcr.
NVaMy all tlu-ilU that alllict us cad be pre
vented and cased by keeping the stomach,
liver and kidneys iu werkim; order. There is
no medicine known that will de this n surely
as Parkers dinger Tonic. See advertisement.
Toe fastidious.
StMin
would-be liyrena leek en with di.-.j;ust
At the rli vines et Kclcctric Oil ' poet
Cut we have Use host article known
te the
world.
And Intend tbatail persons shall knew il.
It. cures coughs, colds, asthma anil catarrh,
llrenchitis and complaints et that kine ;
lldoesnot cesl much, though rheumatic-
cures.
'Tis best nil in tlie world you can Had.
Fer sale at II. 15. Cochran's drug store.
North (iicc:i street, Lancaster.
It
137
ISOOKS AM) S'l'A'M'lOXISliX.
1ITKIST
AftVKKKXTt),
ILLUSTRATED
BOOKS .
and (lii
Cards at
of Art in Christina end New Year
L. M. J!t1jYNN'S,
;. 4-Z WKST KINO STKKF.T.
1881.
CHRISTMAS
HOLIDAY GOODS!!
NOW Ol'IiN!
CALL AND SEE!
at Tin: iioeKsxoici; of
JOII BAEBS SOUS,
15 and 17 NORTH (EEN STREET,
la:scasteii, pa.
UOTLL8.
OW Ol'EN SriCECUKK IIOUSK, ON
11 Enropcen plan. Dining Koeins let
Ladies ami Gentlemen. Entrance at Ne. 31
North Dnke street. Clam and Turtle Soup Soup
Lebster Salad, Oysters in Every Style and all
the. Delicacies et the Season. Wc solicit the
patronage et the public. may7-tjd
STEAMED OYSTEltS.
Specialty made of Steamed Oysters at the
Sl'KECIIEK HOUSE,
Ne. 27 North Duke Street.
Having turnished our Itestnurant with a
boiler for Hteaminc oysters, we take this meth
od et informing the public that we are pre
pared at all time te iurnish them te families
at their houses or at the restaurant.
Ladies' entrance. Ne. 27 Nertli Duke street
GUOFF C'OPELAND,
O0t29-tW Proprietors.
xuir auevs, vxitEuirEAR, r
"10ATS, HOI.MAXS, JACKETS.
WATT, SHAND & CO.
Have opened another eholce Hue of tlies
Elegant Clese-Fitting
LIGHT COLORED
COATS and JACKETS
AT I'KICKS LOWEU THAX KVEii
UAKGA1N3 IN
DRESS GOODS
Twe Cases PAMMASSE I1KESS COOPS
At 8c. and 10c. ii yard.
One Case UKKSTEK SUITING, S3c. a yard
One Case ALJ.-WOOL CLOTH SUITING,
23c. a yard.
Wc eiler the very best possible value in
BLACK
CASHMERES
--'. ;3, 87 l-'-'c, 1 a yard.
At 33, 13, 50, C'-J t-
All the New .-.lades in U0-1NC11
All-Weel CASHMERES, 50c. a yd.
Ladies', Gentlemen's ami Children's ME-
iri.VO and ALL-WOOL
HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR
In all sizes and uualiticti at bottom prices.
We have naiu received a lull line of
BLANKET AND THIBET SHAWLS
it the same Lew Price.
COICSKT GLOVES, LACKS. EMltKOID
EIC1KS. UIIJItONS, IIAXDKEUCIllFFS,
NOTIONS,
IN KNOLESS VA KILTY AT
NEW YORK STOKE
3 & lO E. KING STREET.
"VTKXT HOOK TO TliK. KIIJKT IIOESK.
FAHNESTOCK.
WHITE BLANKETS, .'32.00 A PAIR.
WHITE BLANKETS. S2.50 A PAIR.
WHITE BLANKETS, 83 OO A PAIR.
WHITE BLANKETS. AT ALL PRICES
IV QUANTITIES,
IN QUANTITIES,
Colored lllanfa'ts, $1.50 :i pair.
FLANNELS,
MUSLINS,
GINGHAMS,
SHiaTINGS,
Dress Goods and Silks,
Dress Goods and Satins,
Dress Goods and Velvets.
UNDER WEAK
UNDERWEAR,
FOK LAK1E'.. GKNTP, HOYS ANi Ullll-'.
FOU LADIES. GENTs-, HOYS AND GIKI.S,
ALL S:Zi:9 ASI ALL l'1'.IOE.S,
ALL E1ZBK AMD ALL rfilCCJ.
Felt Cleth ane Flannel Skirts, 50c. up.
Our Ceat Keem lias still a large stock et
Coats aud Delmans, $2.50 te $50.
HORSE BLANKETS,
HORSE JACKETS,
AT LOWEST
AT LOWEST
i'ltlCKS.
ri:lCr.
FAHNESTOCK!
Next Ocer te Court Heuee
11
OI.IHAY SKASOX.
USEFUL PKSBKTS
-IN
EVERY DEPARTMENT.
nni:ss noens jtWAiiVMHxr, aaxrs
FUitxisuixu coons dki'Xht-
.IfF.XT, LADIES' FUUXJSH-
ixu noens ijkj-'t.
China ami (1uss Department,
Notion Department.
DKESS GOODS,
CASHMERES.
STLKS,
SATINS,
VELVETS, and
PLUSHES.
LADIES' SHiRTS SHAWLS, GLOVES
AND
UNDERWEAR.
KAKGAINS In
LADIES' COATS
Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs
in Endless Varinty.
GASSAMER IWmmi CLOTHING
Our Own Kntiiu an:: K all tiarmeiit
IVarraati'tl.
GENTS1 NEfJKWKVu
JIOXIEJI I", (JL O 'EH,
SUSPENDEIifi, ttc.
Sele Agents for the Pearl Shirts.
J. B. MARTIN & CO.,
Cor. W. King and Prince Streets,
Is ANCIAVXEK. PA.
JKWJiLFlliS.
ryeKKJk glasses,
OPERA GLASSES,
OPERA GLASSES,
AUGUSTUS RHOADS, Jeweler,
Ne. 30 East Kins Street. Lancaster. Pa
f6cpt28-3mdeeU