Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, April 10, 1886, Image 2

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THE IiAKCASTER DAELY INTBLLTGENOEK, SATURDAY, APBIL 10, 1880.
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Intelligencer.
tftm CvtNINa IN THE VtAR'B
(MMTt tutme)
M.mmilAM HEN8KU
IOINOER BUILDING,
V'W. Oeratir Centra Bqnw.
lAMMter, Fa.
.&
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WHK. Fi DOUSSSj Yl MFimCtKTi
ftnmrmt.
fern Tin te ftm Cists A Um.
,Y INTELLIGENCER,
J".V
(Eight Paeu.)
Every Wednesday Morning.
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Te Deuam a Yu m Amuses.
ra
r'tHMMKNOCNCE Soucme r.j iviet rT of thi
r vrmw lewnTi CmnftmsMin i stout. te irt
a itSSSVT MS) M OS Slet Of TWI Prtt OWIY I T0 w TMfli
Visssss, mi m muarw, ivr is Meer e soot ruts. u
3 ssesnwws UnM inu m oeia.t te tmi vurt eiKfr.
I all Lmters and Telegrams te
n
THE INTELLIGENCER,
'VW Lancaster, Pa.
the nnmetcr3ntclliacutcr.
i
LANCASTER. Al'ML 10, 1886.
The Western Riet.
The authorities of the Louisa ille &
Nashville railroad seem te be responsible
' -for the bloodshed at St. Leuis, because of
'& thfclr advertising for men of "grit" te
rJ b.ffnnnl thnir rvrenertr. whom thev caused
& sworn In ns deputy sheriffs,
ijmd armed with Winchester rifles,
QfA. natural result followed, lien from the
C backwoods came te them te earn the five
,' dollars a day offered, and they were men
,t,x kwhn tppta tint inellneil te lxi slew te sheet.
A fPlinwore mif Intn n tdripn wliern nhnntlnir
' seemed te be their business, and the incli-
IX nation 10 it speeuuy came wuu me jeers
and the stones or tne crowd, ise serious
fej attack was made upon them, but tlipy fired
unueruie uruvecauun ciiieny ui vverusimu
a crowd, and killed a number of innocent
people. And they ran away when they
saw the crowd coming back te them, and
knocked down the mayor of the town,
Tvhe sought te arrest them; and fired
I aeain In their retreat across the bridce
and killed another innocent man.
Their conduct was net wise nor justifiable,
and no one probably will try te justify it.
Nevertheless, it was conduct that might
a have been looked for from men of their
kind, undertaking te act a3 conservators
of the peace, which it had c'oubt c'eubt
less been the standing aim of
their lives te break upon every opportunity.
They had an excellent cue offered them
and crnlaaeejjf-iFvith ardor. The men
ffbempleyed them are the men te blame,
mere than they, who did but what their
natures led them te de.
The Knights of I.aber,as an organization,
had additional lustre shed upon them by
the Incident. It w as their leader who held
the infuriated crowd back from vengeance
and urged them te de no deed in violation
of the law. With that spirit among the
leaders and obedience te it among the led
the Knights of I nber are sure te win the
object they seek by their organization.
Our Telegraphic Press Service.
The Associated Press, which still occa
sionally does a geed thing, takes a little
crew te Itself for having transmitted te its
newspapers the Gladstone speech, which
was made in ample time for complete re
ports te the American morning journals.
"We have generally gene en the theory
that " geed wine needs no bush," but the
splendid press service which the readers of
the Intellieekceii have enjoyed, appre
ciated and remarked, justifies the observa
tion that the largely increased facilites
Which its patrons new have for obtaining
home and foreign news, are owing te the
superiority of the United Press te the As
sociated Press service for the afternoon
newspapers.
Ever since the Ixtellieexckii has had
a special telegraphic wire and press con
nection run direct te its editorial rooms, it
'has been furnished with from double te
quadruple the amount of news formerly
received from the "pony" Associated
Press service te the afternoon papers of
the interior.
Upen the modern principle of " selec
tion" and the "survival of the fittest,"
from the great bulk of despatches receiv
ed continuously from 9 a. m. te -I p. m.,
are chosen and condensed such a complete
review and summary of the news of the
day that our news page largely anticipates
the next day's morning journals.
A Strange Divorce (uestlen,
In the English court of appeal has just
been concluded n remarkable trial in
which the question at Issue was: Can a
dead man be divorced by law ? Under the
English Jaw adecree nisi fordiverco is
granted, and the divorce Is net completed
until six months afterwards. In the case
in point the nisi decree wa3 made, and the
husband died before the six months had
expired. The question was whether his
relict WTILS II tl Mew nr n 1 1 t'nrifu! .t.tJV. n...t
n . en the decision hung the distribution of a
considerable amount of property. The court
decided that a deciee nisi was net a disolu diselu disolu
tien of the marriage and that consequently
the man was net divorced at the time of
his death. It would therefore necessarily
fellow that he could net be divorced after
death any mere than he could be man led
er condemned.
&
Nene will question the nrenrietv of the
law here laid down, but hew much better
it WMlM ! 1 . J., .
SV? ; u "euiun uui net
S$ rush rashly Inte matrimony 1 The society.
uV. """Bunetce courts weud be unnces.
aary and marriara ivnei.i iu ew-nti i
1 ' !snlty from lta Present fallen state. If
,, divorces were net se easily procured, hus
'4' bands and wivps n.n.,i.i J ..!
.i ,7 ,i "" war wuu ene
another's failings, and net blazon te the
world the shameful story of their misdeeds
v-w.. -wv.,, ,u ictuie legal fepara-
tien.
t m
f r .t Aa In Prtnnn l..e......
- If thern I.s In lw n. tipw tall lnSii i.;.
:",'" ) t i la juguijr lUipuiUUU, 10 106
. fwWk Interest that only first-class men
braad, intelligent and far-seeluj; raen be
ragiriwM te the prison beard. We" under-
X BdUt practically this is a matter te be
-' oatieiled at the Republican primary elec
'' tieM, and that there the strife rages be
' tween bull rings and hog rings for petty
tjMa no creator issue is" Involved than who
I furnish meat or flour, who fchallbe
i baker, lower underkeeper or solicitor.
Ait we leg our Republican friends tore.'
lr, for their own seU-recpect and the
I pttbUe interest invelred, that tern-
thing mere important Is en hand for n few
years w come.
The erection of n great huilcllng like
llil Is te be, with " nil tlie modern im im
llreTpmcnta,,, and likely te cost several
hundred thousand dollars, is net a thing te
be entrusted te botches and jobbers te o e
ecnte, direct or counsel. While the chief
responsibility will fall upon the commis
sioners, the prison Inspectors will liave a
geed deal te de with It ; and the ItepublU
can politicians ought, for once, te pick out
two full-grown men for their ticket In this
year of grace.
A Ueneracter's Miseries.
If te stand above the grave of Adam
made one of his 'children sis thousand
years after the event vv eep ever his death ;
and If the handwriting of (. hrlstepher Co
lumbus compelled raeck wonder and in
credulity from one of the great American
humorists, surely there is that in the letter
of the great explorer, reprinted te-day, te
evoke sympathy and commiseration for the
misfortunes of Columbus.
Itebbed in the beginning of his growing
fame of the fit distinction of having his
name conferred upon the new continent, it
was left te Columbus te have indignities
and contumely heaped upon him, such as
might well call forth the passionate plead
ing of this letter te his gracious sovereign.
That he should declare himself, eleen
years after he had brought the greatest
been te the Old oral, " tne most mlsera mlsera
bie man living " Is pathetic; and what a
wealth of suggestion there is in the reflec
tion that heaven may pursue him " as if
the discovery of this world mav be fatal te
the Old'"
The llencflt or the Ilenht.
We prefer te give the collector of the
pert in San Francisce the benefit of the
doubt raised by his denial of any discour
tesy practiced te the incoming new Chi
nese ambassador. lie says broadly and
distinctly that no indignity and no insult
nor want of politeness was shown te the
celestial envoy, and that all the comments
of the Eastern papers based en such .as
sumptions are baseless.
The press has been very quick nnd eager
te assail the federal officials, and te find
political and meaner reasons for their al
leged derelictions, nnd it has net seemed fit
te any of the newspapers te step and in in
qulre whether there was net room for mis
understanding and mistake.
It is true a minister's credentials iermit
him te land without the usual examination
of his baggage and property, but certainly
his credentials are proper subjects for ex
amination ; and even this might occasion
a' delay which foreigners, unacquainted
with our language and customs and used
te the forms of arbitrary government,
might net understand.
We de net think any American collector
et customs at a great rert would risk his
official head by putting indignity en that
of an entering plenipotentiary. We gie
Ilagerthe benefit of the doubt.
I'ensyi.vam a produced 3,991,505 tens of
ceke in 1-sj, or mere than one-half of the
total amount manufactured. This a great
state.
Leoan was the chief guest of the young
Republican's banquet in Philadelphia Friday
night and In reviewing the glory of the
Republican party he said, after ether thiDgs :
"Certain ether allalra transpired and there
were four eara which I am told are net te
be mentioned." ( Laughter. This Is the
memory of Hayes' fraudulent administration
Jeered even by his own party.
One who should stand net en the order el
going, but go at ence : the striker w be in
dulges in incendiary and inflammatory
talk.
11k must be a hard man te please and she
a yet mere peculiar woman who cannot ilnd
that of special excellence and varied Interest
in the comprehensive contents of te day'x
extra issue or the iNTELLicnNcen. Resides
the regular dally edition or usual size, It
prints a handsome and well-tilled supple
ment of original matter that has permanent
value as well as temperary Interest. Who
will net read with delight the glory of the
lolunteer fire department and the glitter of
lta great pageant or fifty years as?e in I.an I.an
caster; veteran soldiers and lisping
children will fellow with delight our
old campaigner in his adentures in
the field and en the inarch with
the army et the Seuthwest; a bright
young altorney chata in the court heuse cer
rlder, about subjects of sharp interest te lav
men and lawyers; "S'lndbad" prattles away
about a w ide range of subjects from hardware
te literature; and " i ncas"Rlrds vigorously
at the inexcusable vanity et authors. Jew
and Gentile, Philistine and .Kdhetle will
find much of literary and religious note te en
tertain and Instruct them; and altogether this
will be recognized by common consent te be
a great day for the Intellieexceh.
There are 12,000 volumes In the Friends'
library in Germantenn, and net ene work of
fiction among thorn. It must be ery hard
te be a geed Friend.
ll-wtitv boi.Mei.1, son onion. Charles
J. Iiigersell, who died recently, aged 77, In
Philadelphia, was a lieutenant in the Ameri
can navy belore era Cruz In the Mexican
war. He had traveled widely, read much
HndlUeda life of benevolence, wealth and
literary ease. He took profound Interest in
the success of the Democratic party and was
one ei us most Deuntlful patrons. The Lord
leveth acheerful giver.
These who knew Orphans' Court Clerk
Sammy Kaulluian te be ene or the mildest
mannered men that ever entered rule or
charged a fee, will ns astonished te read In
Majer Flwoed Grlesfs interesting reminis
cences of him, in the I-ancaster Jngmrcr,
that Kauflinan once almost became a
bloody bushwhacker. It Hoems, according
te this account, that seen after the Christiana
se riot of 1851, the Valley read from
(..nristlana te quarry vllle swarmed witli
lederal marshals, kiduappers, bummers and
rowdies, who insulted every citizen they
met, flred pistols oil at Intervals and breke
into and rohbed the heuses of negrees, who
were generally from home. Majer Griest
relates :
Kaullman, who had heard ubeut theatlalr,
catne ever te bee me In the evening-, He was
boiling with Indignation. It was belieedthe
gang would return en their way te Chris
tiana, seme seveii miles distant, that night
He propesod that he nud 1 should take
our shotguns and coiice.il ourseUei in
a piece of weeds that bordered the read,
about a half n mile from tLe shop, and
tire into the crowd as It passed leug.
Kald he; "Thern Is no safetv ler life or
property here while these people are running
at large. They w euld rather than net bhoet a
man or burn a building. There Is no use In
PfnUug tbem, for you could de nothing
wiin them. They are mere dangerous than
!f W,.i."l?m aua Ulat wl I,ut tI te their
iffiSPteZP ".'.I " la H ""Tate place te de
IhS H iiey wl.u never kw what hurt
them." liewaaludoadearuMtaudresolutelv
insisted en carryluK out hla plan. But I wm
net quite prepare.1 te gote war it that Uuw
and llnally prevailed en hlin te deslsl
As a fit answer te the malicious stories
afloat about the Irish National League being
at variaueewitu Parnell, the treaturm rvf .i.
organization has Just lerwarded K,oqe 0f
American money te the Irkh Parllaintintary
J tmi,
I'm hay m a great day for bay- Unions.
Mayer Snillh, or Philadelphia, vetoed Uie
hay-window ordinance which proposed te
absolutely prohibit the erection of. Bay-win-dens
en the fronts of buildings erected en
the building line, and Itcbert U arret t, of the
llaltlniore A Ohie railroad company, was
given permission te retain the bay-w itulew
In the front el his palatini llaltlmore resi
dence, tlesplte the objections or his wealthy
next deer neighbor.
It was claimed that prohibition had
"killed "Des Moines, Iowa. Iist year It
spent f.1, 000,000 ler Improvements, tuore than
all the anll-prohlbltlen cities of Iowa put te
gether.
At a big gathering of Spiritualists In Lou Leu
lsllle, Ky.,the ether day, a bombshell wa
thrown Inte the ramp by a skeptic eflerlng te
wager from ?1,000 te $.1,000 that the medium
could net nnsw er the question wnetner a cer
tain missing man had teen klllevl at n Khcn
place. This utterance nearly broke up the
conentlen. The man apparently was no
Idle braggart, for he bscked up his wager
w itli these stirring remarks ; " Life Is a stict
porleil of existence. hen we dle no one
ought te deilre te call us back en earth. When
the mother leeks for the last time upon her
dead child, and afterward feels that It Is safe
In the arms of Ged, w hat does she want with
It back en earth nRsvlu ? If our fathers, moth
ers, brothers and sisters dle, we don't want
to&ee thorn here again: no, it only adds te
the burden and Berrow. Spiritualism Is n
fraud. We de net need any mediums, and
their performances are worthless." This
may net have been ery agreeable te the
host of bclieveis present, but the remarks
w ere leaded dew n w 1th truth.
These who cannot yet swallow the Glad
stone scheme for Ireland pay the highest
trlbutai of praise te Gladstone. Admiring
the worker, they will seen esteem the
work.
We knew it was coming and we had a sus
picion that Senater l.egan would be Its
mouthpiece. This latter misfit statesman
declares that "all the present trouble In the
business of the country and all the dissatis
faction among the laboring classes were di
rectly traceable te the fact that the Demo
cratic party controlled the reins of the government-"
The senator does net use the full
wealth of bis ammunition. There were
some disastrous riots In Helghim and eartb
qnake shocks In the Sandwich Islands that
might have been charged te baleful Deme
cratic Inlluences.
The weather topic is a geed ene for Dem
ocrat and Republican te discuss, ler they
w 111 net right about IL The 1 rish home rule
question is another.
PERSONAL.
Alii'HEfsR. McKviti, senator from Alle
gheny county, in the Maryland legislature,
died Friday in llaltlmore, aged Js years.
rnunnnicK C. nnionTi.i.thewellknewn
Philadelphia lawyer, .was very sick last
night and his physicians expected his death
betore morning.
Helen" Hist Jacksen's name new ap
pears en the title pagoel " Mercy Philbrick's
uneice, a uoek which uas nunerie ueen
publlihed In the "Ne Name" series.
E-.Maer Fhaxk A. Reamisu has sued
Postmaster I). W. Connelly, of fecranten, te
recover $s50, which he claims te hae
leaned the latter ler campaign expenses
InlSSO.
Georek Riddi e, ESii , aged 4 son of
Hen. Gee. W. Riddle, and himself eue of the
leading lawyers of Philadelphia, has died, It
Is belieed, of overwork. He gavea great
deal of attention te educational ami mathe
matical problems, and some years age he
and his brother Arthur wroto"The Law of
Stock Hrekers."
Colonel F. 1). Giiant has made applica
tion In the district probate court for letters
of administration en the estate of his father,
General V. S. GranL The general owned
real estate in the district, and at the time of
his death there was due him twenty-two
days pay as a retired officer of the army,
amounting te f:iS.
Mns. and Miss Evpicett are in mourn
ing for the secretary's stepmether, w he died
recently. The bereavements of the Rayards,
Endicetts and Whitney, restrict their ming
ling in social matters, while the sickness of
Secretary Manning, Attorney General Gar
land and Secretary Lamar, with the Illness of
the inethei of Postmaster General Vilas, has
broken up in several cases hospitalities
planned by them.
Sekater Jenes, et Nevada, at ene time
was worth '0,000,000; te-day, It is doubtful
whether his bank account is geed for one
thousandth part of that sum. Still, he U net
without holies of retrieving his fortunes. He
is Interested In some valuable mines up in
Alaska, which are beginning te pay largely.
Jenes is rarely seen In his place In the Senate.
He prefers loekingartorhls business Interests
te listening te the dull debates of his col
leagues. ilOH TU DO IT.
What Cn lie h.lTetttil bj Srnteiuattr
and
OrgaDlzril Kflert.
J II. Harrison in Princeton Ucvlew.
The effort te save Niagara for w hich New
Yerk state has appropriated a million and a-
half dollars was a new experiment, and it
developed teine facts of law relating te
methods for the propagation of Ideas which
had net been se fully recognized before, and
which apply equally te many things in the
life and thought et our time.
1. Itan evil is tobe remeved, or an Im
portant change wrought by the action or the
people, the first step Is a clear and trnthtul
description of existing conditions, with a
plain, brief presentation of the remedy pro
posed. i What is written must be addressed te
the average understanding of poeplo without
"culture," who work with their hands.
What is plain te thorn will be understood by
all ethers. All rhetorical indirection or dis
play is a fatal disadvantage. Nobody new
takes fine writing aorieusly, net even the
authors of lu
3. The first Impression upon popular at
tention must be followed up by frequent,
brief resLitements, each cemplete in Itself,
and clear lu its iteratieu el the essential orig
inal apjeal ; and must be continuously va
ried and multiplied, without any lengause
till their cumulative cllect produces a rever
beration tilling all the air of the time, and
compelling general atteutien.
4 There will be required a few men of
known character and inlluence, te employ
an agent who understands this evil, and be
lievtH In thB remedy proposed, who shall do de
vote his whole time and energies te the work,
with a large measure of freedom et Judgment
and action as te methods. ThU agent should
be able te employ the pen and the press, as
well as the power of personal appeal.
At present many ellerts te bring about im
portant changes Involve latal waste of energy.
The methods followed aroelten clumsy and
lnelllcient, because they aronetbasod upon
tbelactaet the slluatleu, nor In accord with
the natural laws governiug the propagation
ui jueas.
" Public opinion, te be cilectlve, must be
concentrated," and the publication of valua
ble writings often avails little, and enthusi
astic publlu meetings produce no change In
existing conditions, bucause the nocessary
means for the systematic aud cilectlve propa
gation of Ideas are net employ ed. In this
ceuutry there is often much greater expendi
ture of money and energy In rruitlesi eirerta
for Important public objects, than would be
required ler their accomplishment If prac
tical methods vyere followed. It is net the
fault or the intuwe. "The iiiuttllude Is ca ca
pable of willing loyalty te wisdom."
Mff plug VV llli a Iteum l'ull of U.
A. W. Hwartz, about 28 years of age, farmer
and dealer lu agricultural lmplouienla at
Sinking Spring, went te Reading Thursday
evening en business and registered at the
Keystene house. A bout 12 o'clock he retired
for the night. The occupant of the next room
heard groans and called the porter te find the
cause. The porter came and found the room
full of Illuminated , 'gas, and the odor was
wry strong. The deer aud window were
immediately thrown wide open, se as te al
low the gas te escaiie 'and admit fresh air.
Mr. Swartz lay lu the bed in an unconscious
couditien continuing te mean and snore
loudly seme 15 minutes longer before be
could be aroused.
The Tt of 41an' Hapjiuet,
Frem the i'hll&dclpliU Ledger.
It Is net what life is te bring te a man. but
I what he is able te carry Inte It, that will de
I termlne bla happiness.
DRIFT.
What are w scorning te f The omnipresent
"lutervlewer" has Indeed long been weeping.
Ilke Alexander, that there were no mere
worlds for htm te conquer, anil 1 confess
that 1 have contemplated his tears with
something of that satisfaction which the
tlermaus call Sciatleifi eitile. Hut le, new
comas the news that, greater than Alexander,
I
helms found another world, and straightway
has proceeded te inlonteu IL I rinf, i ulit,
ricic And what Is the worst or it, this
enternrlsiiic Interview or is n wennu. Her
name Is Mrs. S. O. Hern. As 1 understand
It she has done her work with a telephone;
at least she Is still In this world, mid e far
as known has net recently been absent from
our mundane sphere. It can therefore only
hae been by telephene that she has gathered
the olnmner reports which she publishes
In a book entitled "The Xext World Inter-
lowed." In It she gives us the results
verbatim et literatim, of her lntoriews with
Messrs. Titian, Darwin, Herodotus, Herace
Greeley, and ethers " tee numerous te men
tien." She even had the " enterprise te in
terview A Stranger in the next world, with,
out se much as tlrst getting an Introduction
te Mm.
Ukino aweuian, and a msrrled woinan.leo,
this Interview or naturally called up the late
Mrs. Carlyle, and put seme characteristically
persenal and searching questions te her.
I am nfrald, how-ever, this estlniable luly
fooled Mrs. Hern, for she declared, " 1 assert
that Themas larlyle was eer thoughtful of
my comfort and happiness." Hut perhaps
the old Scotchman wm standing by, and se
his peer wife was afraid te speak the truth
about him. Or did she sltnplj mean te sa
te Mrs. Hern "It's none of your business" T
At any rate her answer will be asorodlsap aserodlsap asoredlsap
polntment.to the thousands et deeply sympa
thetic lady trlnmlsMrs. Carlyle lett behind
her.
It seems a pity that Mrs. Hern should net
have been a little soenor with her boek:
then she would certainly have atLilned te
fame even If her own work should ceme te
be forgotten, l'er she would unquestion
ably have had a whole chapter devoted te
her lu the entertaining little volume en
" The anlty and Insanity or Authers," that
hasjut appeared. Alas, she was tee late'
Hew narrowly some people miss celebrity
and renew n '
As It i, this curiously Interesting, un
pleasantly interesting, record of the unfortu
nate or disagreable traits of authors, will
seen have te be revised, probably republished
annually with a new appendix every year, l'er
new authors are almost daily springing up in
every direction, and nine-tenths of them are
authors only Irem vanity or Insanity. I
have come across several insunees tint icr
talnly have te be Included In this record.
Here 1 one etthem.
1 was conversing with an author who Ins
made for himself quite a name in the realm
of fiction, and has already reached a place at
least In the third, or jerbaps second rank of
American novelists. He will, hew ever, nev or
be either a Hew ells or a Cable. Ner does he
aspire te be, as little pretwbly as the fox of
old aspired te the possession of the grapes
that hung above hlra. Fer he expressiy
teid me that Cable was insutlerable te him,
white the whole art of the James-Howells
school was a sheer trick of style, which anv
clever writer could imitate. I confess that I
opened my eyes almost te a blank stare at
this. When 1 was further vouchsafed the
Information by this modest author that he
could without" any trouble produce a novel
that would pass for a work of James, 1
quickly closed my eyes again that I might
be spared the sight of his blushes, whu li
was, however, wholly unnecessary, lie did
net blush. He simply went en heaping nsa
en Pellen by naively confiding te me that he
was se imbued with the spirit and method et
Thackeray, that 11 he chese he could at any
time produce a novel that would be accepted
by alias a posthumous work of the great
Englishman ! This nearly took my breath
I gasped and left in silence. More deeply
than ever I felt what a great pity it was that
book en "The Vanity and Insanity of
Authers" had already been written.
It is but Just te this author te note, how
ever, that his vanity has net yet led him te
handicap any et his books with his portrait,
nor virtually te dedicatethem tehim-cll, nor
te write his own biography for them, nor
yet te make himself the here of them, and
se te till them with himself and his prai-e
that the reader is left mero than hair im
pressed with the thought that they were
written with the sole purpose of glerilying
the author and his deeds. It was another
writer who did that, The future reviser of
"The anity and Insanity of Authers' is
herewith respectfully referred te him also.
The work will alTerd abundant rich material
for the new edition.
What is vanity anyhow Are we le pity
or te blame It, or both I sometimes think
It must be a kind of dlsoa.se incident te the
human mind at a certain stage of its develop
ment, something like the rnumps or measles,
te which the physical organism Is particu
larly liable at certain stages el bodily grew tli
from childhood te youth, or youth te man
hood. Certain it is that the persons w he
entirely escape its attacks In 0110 form or
another, are few and fortunate Perhaps it
is owing te some spiritually malarieus in
lluence in our educational methods. At
least I notice that net one in a hundred of
our youths and maidens whom we graduate
from our high schools is free trem it ; and that
as small a proportion of our young menand
women whom we send te our normal schools
and colleges escape IL Indeed they are
there scarcely a year before they are swollen
and pulled up te a degree that would he
ludicrous 11 it were net no painful te thev
truly interested in them ; while by the time
they graduate many of them are ready te
burst.
Its being se common Is possibly the reason
why we neglect its preier treatment and
fall into the grievous error of net only jor jer
mltting the disease te le carried into our
social and professional circles, but of Indulg
ing and nourishing it there, fanning its fever
with flattery and feeding it with shallow,
dtsbonest compliments, until it becomes
chronic, nnd like an incurable, growing
cancer, undermines the whole character and
ruins all possibility of the victim's ever at
taining te anv thing like true manhood or
lasting usolulness. Ter that is precisely
what vanity and self-conceit inevitably de.
While we may thorefero pity and even geed
naturedly laugh, at the pulled up, Happing
fledgelings whom our schools and colleges
with their system of public entertainments
and commencements annually let loose upon
the world, we must draw the line right
there. We have no right te let the mumps
bocemo a permanent swelling of the glands;
and as little te iermlt the hell-conceit or our
young graduates te grew into an abiding,
debilitating and disgusting vanity. It surely
is better ler the ass te be told by a friend,
mat me liens HKin uees net cover nun, man
te allow his bray te expose him before all
the world!
lit this I mean that we ewo it te the
young, and ewo It te ene another, tee, te
bring mere plain honesty into our sedal
relations especially. I don't mean that we
are in any way te violate or de away with
any of the real courtesy and amenities or
society. I abotniuate the man who prides
himself en always "speaking his mind
right out" He is a social nuisance, aud
worse We can be honest without being
ruffians. When a friend unfortunately lies
boeouie possessed with the Idea that he is a
great singer, aud will bawl ler us en every
!eksible occasion, we need net go up tnhliii
and tell him, "your Hinging In detectable."
Rut neither de we have le applaud aud
eucore him, tell him what dellght his artlstle
and leellng rendition gave us, and insist en
his aoen giving us and our company the
same pious ure again. It is our praUe and
applause that feed his vanity, and are really
te blame for It mere than the peer weak
minded fellow himself. What we ought te
dots simply te maintain a discreet Mlence.
He would neon ceme te understand lta mean
ing, aud would subside, or else try te
Improve,
O.nck in a while, perhaps, henesty brings
us embarrassment ; but net often. Fer the
people are happily few whose chronle Hell
conceit has reached aa insane a point aa that
of the geutleinan who the ether day stepped
a lady acquaintance en the street and ac
costed her thua : " Did you see my picture
in the paper r What de you think of It T"
She, trying te escape, the necessity of an an.
1 wr, replied that she had net seen it "Ohl"'
exclaliniHl he, " you must nee It 1 I'll send
you a copy or the imper containing 1U"
Thai, by the way, Is the low est of all forms
.ranlt which prldes ltsell en mere ior ier ior
Nenal appearance. Yet It is te be found In
men and women or all classes, in some In
whom it ought te le most Impossible and
least teleralisl. ler It Is always a sum sign
that the person has nothing olse te prUle
hlnisolfeu. l'rldeef persetnl appcamm-e Is
exer only n kind of Inst rcerl of anlty.
What must oue think then of a minister of
the Be-spot who se prides himscH en his
small and shapel fiwt that he has lieen
knew u te keep a new pair et beets en nil Sat
pair ut beets en all hat- I
urda night, iHicaiise the lit hi n se tightly,
he was afraid If he took them oil he would ,,f
-'v ..'.v. ... hv ............ ,.. Minn lu. ,-.i,.v..-
Ing en Sunday morning ' Imagine what bis
sermon must lme ts'en tint morning' 1
myself knew another gentlemen of the muue
cleih te whom no compliment Is se grateful
ns te hear some 1 idy ny niter the sermon
' Wh it n handsome moi'lie is ' or le read
el himself that he Is . ' ii --t --a.g uj
1 earance," " striking preein e," etc, ad
nauseam. And he hears and reads such ex
pressions continually, simply because It is
absolutely the only thing that" can ls said of
hlui ' Is net such a one te be commiserated
with" Or Is he te be despised hiwe
fault is It that he has lallen te se low an es
tate that only " geed leeks " remain
Ilereendeth the lessen en van II v.
' I M Vs.
.SlJlflS ,m:h- I'PIII.IOATIUXS
1'rrili Hint
Tlmrl VV111K. of riilltlrxl niul
l.ttenir) littrrrt.
'J'if J'ltti nl Science Qitat terltj is a new
publication trem the press of tllnn A Ce.,
ew verK, ueveieu 10 ine Historical, statis
tical and comparative study of politics,
economics nud public law. ft Is under the
editorial management of the faculty or jKtlltl
cai science el Columbia college, w he premise
te make it " afield ler the dlscusMen of poli
tical, eeoneinliiand legal questieus " from a
scientific fttaudtsmiL '1 he tlrst niimborcemes
te us In plain, substantial form, well printed,
and en geed pntHr, aud w Ith Its 1 2 luges
devoted te sit leading articles nud a number
of book notices and reviews. In the Intro
ductery article Prof. Munree Smith tries te
ueiiut w imi is me domain 01 political science
and closes w 1th this paragraph, w hich mav
be taken as the kev-nete of the ielitica"l
principles and sentiments el the whole
yiiurff lu : The conception of the state as
a mere protective association ngilnst external
force and Internal disorder is antiquated ""
Whether the Increasing Importance of
the state be deplored or applauded, the
fact rem litis that it Is rapidly bee mlug, If It
is net already, the central "factor of social
evolution." PreL Jehn W. Rurgess treats
of the American commonwealth. He tries
te answer thequestlen, What Is Nationality
which he does substantially by adopting the
views aud principles of Dr. Mulford, te
whom, however, no reference Is made. Then
without any necessary logical sequence he
concludes from them that the individual
stites or the nation have virtu illy no rights
whvtever, and rpjelces that by the dawn of
the twentieth century we shall have
"the nation, sole nnd exclusive sov
ereign, distributing the powers nud
functions of government between con cen
tentral ergins, commonwealth nnd munici
pality." 1 rank J. Geed new discusses the
collection of duties aud sharply criticises, our
American metnetls in me matter, liel. K.
M. hmith's article en American labor
statistics is a very cireful examination of the
manner of collecting and compiling such
statistics by the various state bureau, which
shows their utter in ulequacy and misleading
character. Legislative inquests are inves
tigated by 1 W. Whltridge; while In the
last article D. de Leen discusses the llerlln
conierenco and blames our government for
the part It took In the auieas teing Incon
sistent with the Menree doctrine and Amort Amert
cm principles. Altogether the Qattettv
premises te supply a real want,
A Ureal freurti Tile.
Saxen A Ce., 1- Tiit'ituc building, New
erk, issue te-day M. 1 remit Shelden's
I'nglish translation of 'Salatiuube," the
mastorplece of the great 1 rench novelist,
1 laubert, founder of the naturalistic school
or literature, debased by ela. The Louden
Tmes properly calls it a "fascinating story
of love and war, rich in heroic Carthaginian
lore, set in glowing birluric splendor, sur
rounded with an atmosphere of dreamy
tropical warmth and local color, nud with iLs
weird serent scene and mysterious cults,
lias long been regarded" as an un
translatable work." That apprehension
is, however, dispelled by the mastertui
manner in which Shelden has done,
his work. The original author stored his
mind with the rich experience et wide travel,
scientific research and minute and careful ob
servation. He wandered ever the hills of
dreece, frolicked at Corinth, dug furiously in
Mycen e belere Schliemann, rdi, sacked mu
seums In the buried cities of the plain,
scoured Tunis nnd delved into the ruli s,
of Carthage, te equip hlni'-elf for the bill.
In it he depicts the terrific siege of the mer
cenaries against Carthage, which Hamllcar
crushed with stupendous eltertand punished
with unsparing cruelty. Following historic
tact with close fidelity, he has grafted ujen
the narrative a fascinating story of the fierce
and sensuous passion of Mathe, the Llbvan
chief for Satammbe, the daughter et Hauiil
i.ir; and nil the fateful results of his snatch
ing the mysterious veil from the temploef
TaniL The work moves with impetuous
torrent of narrative, poetic dlscrlptieu nnd
striking characterization, the passiouate and
trlchtful excesesef pagancivillzatlenand the
most artistic elaboration.- As Edward King
s.ivs;
se long as men battle and women love, se
long as human nature Millers no change
Inltsgreat attributes, he long will the story
of Hamllcar nnd of spendliis, et Mathe, and
et Satammbe, of the leprous Hanne nnd the
fiery Narr' Havas, lie rtad with strong emo
tion and with avidity. It anakens only
noble thoughts, despite its sensuous setting.
It is like an exquisite piece or Greek sculp
ture, mighty, jet tee ethereal in Its beauty
for nnslein hands te create, set against a
back - ground iloedul with aumptueus
color. The great scene in the book, the
banquet and riot of the barbarians, their
contemplation of the crucified liens en the
read te sicca, tne preaching or the revolt by
Spendius, the entrance Inte the tomple of
Tanlt by night, the contemplation of Mathe
enshrouded in the veil by Salamiube, the
arrival of Hamllcar from Sicily, the Inter
view In the tent, the Carthaginian prisoners
In the ditches filled with water, the woes of
Hanne, the deaths of the barbarians on en
trapped Inte the defile, the sacrifices te
Melech, and the death et Salammbe, are
every ene genuine works of art, Imperish
able as diamonds; anil if the French critics
did net at first Ilnd sulhcieut contrast In
these paintings en the sublimely sculptured
lortlce, they discovered them when they
had bestowed proper attention upon the
work."
IIIalne'A Sfceml Volume.
Thore is a goad devl of the money-making
idea about the Rlalne leek, the Grant book
and the Legan book, net te speak of Kime
less notable productions of the present polit
ical peried. They Jnve been widely
and deftly advertised for advertising pur pur
pese ; aud their appearance indicates
that they were made te sell. As
Hpeclmens of the book-maker' art they
de no credit te their publlshers and the
Hjstem upon which they are put upon the
publlu Is at variance with the scholar's and
the llteratteur's taste. Rut It is useless te
deny the value or such works te our politi
cal history- Renten'a "Thirty Years VIew"
increases In value and interest as the genera
tions succeed each ether; Van Huren's His His
tery or Political Parties, Jeim Qulncy Adams'
Diary, Groeley's History of the War.Alex.H.
Stephana' War Retwecn the States, H. S.
Cox's revlew of Congress In his day, and all
such works have an unquestioned literary
anil historical value. Narrow and personal
as may be their authors' points or vlow,olIen vlew,olIen vlow,elIen
slvely egetUtlcal as is the style semetimen
and impossible as It Is for nny contempo
rary readers te Hympithlze with the sontl sentl
ment, the uses of these vvorkHare undisputed.
Most iiolable of the present era Is lllalne's.
the first volume of which has lieen rev lewed
In these columns. It Is easy te belleve that
the second has net met with nearly he large
n sale; the keen edge el the iiepular a
petlte has et eourne leeii taken oil ; and
the times are net he auspicious ler
Its publication as when Mr. Rlalne was In
the Hush of his candidacy ler president. We
are much mistaken, however, If the future
student of our political history will net find
as inueh of value mid interest in Mr. lllalne's
account of coiigriwslenal government from
the beginning or Jehnsen's administration
te the end of Hayes', as In his history of par
ties from Jellersen te Lincoln. He Is a vivid
and picturesque writer, a man or lllerary ac
quirements and descriptive genius; granted
that he was a chief actor In these scenes and
no Impartial witneas, the fact that hels for
the fourth time the candidate of a great por
tion el his party for president given te his
views of men and thlnga a significance that
is te be carefully studied In connection with
our civil history. UN book deals w'th the
reconstruction period, and the great contest
between president aud Cengrats; with the
mighty senatorial junta and the Liberal
Republican reuill of 1872 1 with the Grant
administration, the electoral dlspute of 170,
the Hayes regimis nnd the famous Chicago
contention or l&sewlnt mero lnementima
eHvhs In the hMery or our own rty
l)lltlcsT What morn iMUsplcueus figure
than this historian who tells or them; and
whecauatthls brlr distance sisak or his
tilttorepiKinent and hated mat, Idr.CenklliiK,
as a man who In JSSO, "by Intellectual force,
liy anliint real and by common rwognUlen,
was i the iimster spirit and the acknewledgiHl
lejdcr'enhenram fercs, and or his power
fill and eloquent speech for his chief T With
the dlillcult and dellcnln i.uir .,i i...iin- i
J.
liimm.ir In ihi.1..,,1 1.1. .....,,.?...'
siuveeds remarkably well . 1, .ii.muV. iVii
that " vanity or authors" VlsoHlinre
referred Kv e lielltlcal Rtuilent'a oeiili
ment and no geuenil library Is cemplete
without Imth elumis of lltaliie'a Isxik. We
say lids w he de net count hint either ivitrtet
or statesman.
Nm I'rrliMlliata.
'1 he fourth series of the valuable Jehns
Hepkins Fnlerlty studies In historical aud
lslltlcal s-'ience, is dnxetcd le "Pennsyl
vania lloreughs." William P. Ilolcemb" Is
the nilthnr and It Is a v alusble stud v.
The leading articles In the 'Jttermttl
Quarterly Jlevieic for April are Re. Dr. F.
A. ila'n "General Chiracter el the Old
Testament Re Islen," and Rev. Dr. 1- N .
(lerhart'N en "The Light of Hely Scripture."
A t.l'i:C13lF.. 1'A.OK MUM I.UOAS.
Tim
I ntaiiKvt Warrior CIltM Yt
Ujr le
inn VMLl Western Imagination.
in ills new book, which the publlshers ex
pect te have ready about the 0lh of this
mouth, Senater Legan deals with what he
calls "The (j rent Conspiracy" of the South
ern rebellion, without regard te syntax or the
feelings of his fees. It Is thusheilraws upon
his Imagination for an account of Lincoln's
first night In the VS hlte Heuso :
Hew tint great, nnd Just, and kindly brain,
In the dim shadows el that awful first night
at tlie White Heuse, must have searched up
and down and along the labyrluths el histerj
nud "corridors of time" everywhere In the
past, for any analogy or excuse for the mad
ness of this secession niove neiit and searched
in vain.
With bis grand nud abounding faith in
Ged, hew Abraham Lincoln must have
stormed the very gates of heaven that night
with prayer that he might be the means of
securing peace and union te his Ixjlevcd but
distracted country I Hew his great heart
must hav 0 been racked with tlie alternations
el hepe nud foreboding of trustfulness nnd
doubt I Anxiously he must have looked
for the light of the morrow that he might
gather from the pros the manner In which
his Inaugural had been received. Net that
he feared the North but the Seuth; hew
would the wayward, wilirul, issionate
Seuth receive his prollerd oilve branch T
Surely, surely thus ran bis thoughts
when the brave and gallant, and generous
poeplo of that section cume te read his mrn.
sage or cacennd goed.ivll),thoy must see the
suicidal felly of tlielr course Surely their
hearts must lie touched and the mists of pre pre
judlce dissolved, se that reason would re
sume her sway, and reconciliation fellow I
A little mero time for rollectlen would jet
make nil things right The young men of
the Seuth and southern leaders' false appeals,
must seen return te reason. The prairie tire
Is terrible while It see(is along, but It seen
burns out. When the young men face the
emblem of their nation's glory the dig or
tlie land 01 ttieir lilrth rAriivvlll ceme the
mictien, and their false leaders will lm hurled
from place ind iwiwerandnll will again be
rigbL ea, w lien It comes te firing en the
old, old Hag, they will net, cannot de It '
Retwts'ii the compromise within their reach,
and mi li sacrilege as this they cannot waver
long.
he, doubtless, nil the lung night, whether
naklnger sleeping, tlie mind of this truo true
Iip tried son of the West, throbbed with the
mighty weight of the problem entrusted te
him for solution, and the vastresjenslbllltIeH
which he had Just assumed toward his fellow
men, his nation, aud his Ged. Ami when,
at last, the long lean frame was thrown upon
the couch, and "llred uature's sweet re
storer" held him briefly in her arms, the
smlle el hopefulness en the wan cheek told
that, despite all the terrible dllllrultles et tlie
situation, the s!ee.T was sustained by a
strong and cheerful belief in the Previdence
of Hed, the patriotism of the people, and
theelllcacy of Ills inaugural peace-cllerlng te
the Seuth.
H In n euce men risen tlielr autumn, sickly
Jevs
alt eirapace, as yellow leaves from trees,
Vt evurv little hmith lutaforutue tilens,
'till, left quite unkvil el tbelr happiness,
In the chill blasts of winter I liny expire.
Yeung
.Sour ilgla. riieiiinatlsrn. erysipelas, sere threat,
toothache anil till ether pains ami aches are
promptly cured liy alvutien Oil. 1'rlceS cents,
teughing Clara Ceiimly, chirwtnir Chirl-a
Glrnaunntng, carelessly catching celli ; crtep
ing chills cause Clam coughed continually;
cruel, ereupy tough, that would have killed her,
hail nhe net used Ii Hull s Cetih Stqi, cost
ing cents.
The elllcicyef KedhtarC ought" are 1 vouched
lerby Unltetl States Architect Clark
HVECIAT. NOTICES.
Curious te think tint desks and chairs kill peo
ple, but they de. luken In large quantities
ofllie lurnltiire is fatal as yellow lever. We sit
and wrlte enrselves nway Sedentary habits
produce constipation that begets djupepsla;
rheumatism ami kidney trouble fellow In their
train nnd death ends the chapter, leu whose
lives parsed ever desks and In the con lined air
of unite Bought te keep Dr. Kennedy's " n n
verlm Itemedy "nlwas en hand for the
stomach nnd liraln
inarlO-imeedAw
WHY WILL 10U cough when Mhlleh'a L'ure
III slve tmmedlate r llei. 1'rlce 10 cl , SO cts ,
unit f I, l'er sale by II. II. Cochran, Druggist,
Ne 1J7 North Ilneen street.
"Spent I'llly Dollars
In doctertnc for rheumatism before I tried
Jhemm' Eciectric Oil Lhtd a Wcent bottle of
this intdlclnn and itel out In one week, her
bums and sprains It Is excellent," J as. Dur
ham, Kait Pembroke. V . ter sale by II. II
Cechruu, UruRKiJt, 137 and ID North Queen
street, 1-ancaster.
8II1LOHS CATAHHII KKMKI-a positive
cure for Catarrh, Dlptherla, and canker Meuth,
her aale by II. li Cochran, Druggist, Ne. 1J7
North Queen glrtet.
Honesty llm ll,t Policy,
in advertising a medicine it Is best te be hon
est; te decetve ene will uuverde; the people
went stand It. let the troth be knew 11 that
Jlurtlnck Jllaeil Jllttm cure scrofula, and all
eruptions el the skin. I his 'iieUlilne Is sold
eveiywhere by druggists, for wde by II. 11.
Cochran, druggist, 1 r? and ISO North Queen
street, IjincuMer.
"IIACKMETACK
"n last In ir and fragrant eer-
fume. 1'rlce i'iuricl se cents, ter tale by H.il.
Cochran, Druggist, Ne. IJ7 North Queen ktreuU
A iv'erd or Caution,
liallreml men, inech illicit, commercial travel
ers, bajie balllstH, fanuc rs, nud ethers tt he labor
out. of doers, are pecullirly liable te accident
nnd Injury 'Itiemai' Kcltctrie Oil ferbrnlsca,
bums. Mies and sprains. Is enn or the finest np np np
pllcatlouseet duilsed. I or side by II, 11, Coch
ran, druggist, 1J7 nud 13J North Queen street,
iJincaster.
Can't My Ktieugli,
"I cannot speak tee highly of Jlunleck. Jlloed
Jlitlrri thej hav u b en a blessing te me. Cured
me or biliousness and dj snepsla from which I
bad Mirrored lervears " Mr. .1. Marsh, Hank el
'lorenlo.Onl. Fer Hale by II Cochran, drug
flat, 1.17 and 12t North Quecn street, Luncaster.
AKK YOU MAIIK miserable by indigestion,
constipation, JME7uies,.w ' "I,,, '
DU7tness
iim, mi ij'i'uiiif, iui
..... Mt.l.. 4 Ultll'lll'U V it.
fill 7 DllllOU n llinucni if l'n"" vm.
or nalu by 11. 11. cetnran, uruggisi, e. iiw
North Queen street,
Tliniulrr It Down the Age,
That for lameness, for rheumatism, ler aches,
for palns.nnd for uprains l)r 'Jheinai' Hcleetrie
Oil Is a positive and tellable remedy. "Dr.
1 nemas' hclectileOll" can be purchased of any
druggist. Ker aale liy II. 11. Cochran, druggist,
I JT nnd 11 North Queen street, Lancaster
All Admire 11 Handsome Tare,
A puie, clear skin villi make any face hand
some MaiilfcaUy unj thing which strengthens
and enriches the blocs! wlli directly affect the
h hole person. All eruptions of the skin disap
pear when JIurtleeK IHoeil lUttert am employed.
They area vegetable remedy at Inustluiable
value l'er sain liy II. 11 Cochran, druggist, 137
and It) North Qui en street, ijinitister.
i:m ova l thi:
UNDKRSiaNKIi
J-V Wholesale and Itctall denier In 'truck
ruck,
KAbf
Fish. Oysters. Ac. barliiir re moved 10 111
KINO hlllKhl' (Killlnger'H old stand), re.
spcetfully solicits a continuance of the patron,
age heretofore se liberally bestowed.
upJ-lKcl WILLIAM BOAS.
-I7IOH WOUKlNOMnN'H HUI'PUKS OO
X! te llechteld's, and ea the best Overall In
the market for the money, heavy Duck Itiveted
buttons, Deublo Drams und Hip Pocket, Price
only W cents. Dress aud Working bhlrts.
Hosiery of any kind, rome Jeb lets; late si vies
Linen nnd Paper Cellars, HandkcrrhtHls, but but
penders uml outleiu. All cheap ler cash,
AT HfcCIITOLD's,
Ne. 53 North Queen Street.
ATJ-Slpn of lha lllg Stocking.
1', B.-C'helce Uulldlng bteu and Buna for lale.
WATVIIICIt, MO.
F-OALinvin.ii.tce.
I'im.Anr.Li'iMA.
CARVING
aamoOnrvein
Deef Ourvern
FlshOarverri
DINNRR KNIVD9
DRSSErtT KNIVES
FRUIT KNIVES
PCARL HANDtXS
IVORY HANDLES
PLATED HANDLES
NUT FIOKS
NOT OftAOKS
Tlie Flnoet Outlery
The Lewest Prlcea
IL
J)U2
CHESTNUT
ST.
CALDWELL
& CO.
Careful attention given le orders and in
quiries by Mail.
vy-ATCHlS, CLOCKS, M
WATCHES, CLeis, JEWELRY,
ciikai" reit cash
Lancaster VV ntche at the lowest Prices ever
etTertsl ; being a fttockheldnr enables tun te sell
these wntchca se cheap. Klgln, Wnltham and
ether " niches en sale. S prelacies, Opern li lasses,
Ac Itepntrtngef thonbevo ukuieU articles will
receive my personal nttenttnn.
I.OUI9 VVKtlKIt,
Ne HOii North Queen St., opposite Ctly Hetel
(Nenr I'enn'a IL 11. lieneU)
r Agent ler A intuit A VVA1C1I.
ItHY tiOUllH.
rrmicers.
All-Weel Tricots in Sprint; Slindra
And Klcgnnl I'lnlsh feriV a yard,
IT Til
North End Dry Goods Stere.
J. VV. 1IVKNK,
nnrS-Ild Ne KJ North Chicen street,
rpfnrNiTvv CASH steki:.
NEW CASH STORE,
Opposite the Keystone Heuso and
Northern bank,
Xes. 247 & 249 North queen Stiwt
Today and en Monday e open our New
Sprtnr ilresn (ioeds ; all chelcr, poed nud cheap.
Alse N lin's V rlllnKs In cream, pink, blue, cru.
white and black Crinkled i-i'crucker, lUtUte
Cleths, Patterns, Percales, 'Zephyr CilnKh'ims,
Foulard. Chtutces, New Spring Prints, 1'lAln
and l'luld Nalnsoeka, the llcrkley Cambric the
nicest goods of the kind In thu market, nnd a
full assortment of domestics all new and at low
iirlces. All are Invited te call and sen our New
iprliiR Stock,
lebstyit VV It. ItOWKUS.
"JOHN H.
UIVLKIt. OKO. 1 UATHVON.
$50,000
CAMI SALK OK
Dry Goods. - - Dress Goods.
SILKS, &c.
White Goods, Embroideries,
LAOES, RIBBONS,
HOSIERY, GLOVES,
CHCAM. LK1IIT IIT.UK. 1'INK AND C'ltlSl
SON CASHMKUK, SHAWLS, At
-Mnt be sold within Ninety Days Hilt
C .Veil. lSargulns all thieugh our store
JOHN S. GIVLER & CO.,
Ne. 25 East King Btroet,
LAKfUftTH, 1'J.
G
RKAT BARGAINS.
IIIK311 AltlllS Al.3 Ol
Dress Goods
-AT Til K-
New Yerk Stere.
Homespun Weel Face huttings, UXc ajar.!,
made te sell at'juc.
lertv-lnch Zanltl Suitings, Ke a yard, city
prlce3lc.
1 Dirty-Inch All Weel Homespun, New Colen,
23e. a yard,
Flne Spring Cashmeres, yard wide. S3c. a yard.
Camel's Hair. Suitings, te Inches lde,37Xc a
jard.
Flne Kngllsu Cleth tunings, all wool, only
37c. a yard.
New Canvas Suitings, 50c a janlj usual
price, 510.
8Ilk and Weel Hulling, SS Inches wide, 60c a
yard ;
Silks! - Silks!
We are new sliewlngjthe greatest buigalns In
Dress Ml ks ever shown In thu state.
Colored Dress bilks, "Sc. a lard: everyday
price, ll.W),
Klegant llluck Dirss bilks, warranted te give
satisfaction, il.ue, 11.23 and ll.Via jard.
WATT & SHAND,
Nea. 6, O Ss 10 Eaflt Ulnar St.
LANUASTKK, PA.
. JfUUNlTVHE.
pTOI'KMKir.K'H.
Did 011 sny you are In need of
FURNITURE,
If se, be sure and call no us, and we will de our
best te please j oil,
fi. K. liOFFMEIER
26 East King Street.
$1,000
BEWAKDI FOU ANY
case of Kidney Troubles, N'erv
eus Debility, Mental and Physical Weakness,
that ItOTANIC NKKVK 1UTTKK8 falls te euro.
Beld by druggists, BO Cents. IIKUU MEDICAL
CO., Ne. 15 North Din Bireei, rniiaaeipnu, i'a
ClrculATs free, marWieedAw
t&
i
e
s"3- '
. M&i. t-t, . . a4 l it Riv &r
gjk
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