Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, July 21, 1888, Page 4, Image 4

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J?HE LANCASTER DAILY INTELIilGENOER, SATUBDAY. JULY 21,
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A.COMIM ECLITSE.
WH.L BE OF THE MOON AND
WILL BE TOTAL.
IT
'.-i sjsjsswthlnr of the rhlloeopliy et Eclipse,
Tssrstlirr with Something rf General
Interest Rrgnnllne; the 'Wonders of (be
Harry Heavens.
On Sunday night, July 22, then will
occur a celestial phenomenon which may
fee witnessed by every Inhabitant of the
western continent who wishes te de se,
,ui net a cent will be charged for admis admis
'Ien te the show. Nothing jan prevent
the free enjoyment en that night of en
fcudhnce of several hundred million pco pce
'Via except bad weather, for western Asia,
tee, will take In rt part of the display.
A total ccllpse of the moon Is ie take
tvUce and the curtain will rise in New
lYerk ene minate
before 10 o'cleck:
la Blchmend, M
Heea minutes bo be bo
,'ferf 10; In Clncin
'jwtL seventeen
Minutes past 0; in
iBt. Leuis, a 1 x
pnlnntcs befere 0;
land In Denver,
llve minutes be bo be
fere 8. At these
local times the
,taoen tU1 enter
what Is called the
penumbra (a
word meaning al
most a shadow)
"pi tbe earth's
ihadew. Fifty,
nine minutes later
jit will enter the
inmbra or renl
htdew. IaVaa"
ether CCtyrains -aV ,
jBlnntts,theawBj--f ,
rmrtvn r-i.tnr
will be wholly la-fhls ahadew, or totally
eclipsed, and remain. In the dork shadow
for ene hour and ftirtV-three minutes. It
will take another fitty-nlne minutes for
;the s&telllte te pass entirely out of the
umbra, and still another fifty-nine te get
out of the ether side of the penumbra and
go en its way ns though nothing had hap
pened te disturb the serenity of Its conn--tcnence.
At thG beginning of this grand enter
talnment the moon will be about two and
una-half hours nbove the horizon In New
Yerk, and lower down for places west.
At tbe end It will be approaching the
western horizon en the morning of Mon
day, The entire tlme occupied by the
exhibition will be five hours and thirty
nine minutes.
The Illustration of the relative position
of the sun, earth and moon during the
eclipse Till enable readers te clearly un
derstand what has already been saltl. It
may be of interest te add some distances
and measurements that may net have
been memorized. The sun is 01,000,000
miles from the earth. The moon is dis
tant 210,000 miles from the earth. The
length of the moon's shadow is about
210,000 miles. Sometimes the moon Is
further than that distance from the earth
and sometlmes less. In en annular eclipse
the shadow vanishes before It reaches the
'surface of the'earth. But the shadow of
'the earth Is thrown out te the moon, and
(does net vanish In a point until It has
,extended 600,000 miles farther Inte space.
At the distance of the moon this dark
(shadow, or umbra, Is still about 6,700
miles la diameter, and the moon being
only 2,100 miles in diameter, considerable
time Is taken te get through the shadow,
though the moon is rushlug along at the
rate of ever 2,000 mllc-i nn hour.
Vhlle observers nre waiting for the re
appearance of the moon after It cresses
the merldlsn up near the zenith they will
naturally leek around for ether objects In
the midnight sky. The most conspicuous
by far will be the king of the planets,
Jupiter, In the constellation bcorple
With fi geed opera glass Its four moons
can be neon. The bright red star near
Jupiter is named Antarle, and is also
known as cer Scojilenls, the heart of the
Scorpion.
MAr OP MAItS.
. The next most conspicuous star is Mars,
'two hours In time west of Jupiter. This
Iplanet resembles the earth In many par
ticulars. It has been studled with great
care, as the illustration suggests. The
dark outlines ero water and tlifl light por
tions land. It is bceu that It has four
continents. These have been named Ilor Iler
ischcl, Dawes, Medler and Secehl, and It
is also seen that a railroad might extend
loreund the planet en the equator by nytk
Inga few bridges. Thelargebedy of water
'containing an Island is named Delarue
fea, and the mass In the ether hemisphere
Dawns ocean. On the land artificial
canals have recently been announced,
though their existence is net proven
This planet has two moons, but they nre
se small that If one should drop some
ulght upon the city halls of New Yerk.
, Chicago or St. Leuis, tbe debris would
net cover one-half of these cities. One of
i them flies nreuud Mars in much less time
than it takes the planet te turn upon its
axis. A bright little, star near Mars is
named Splca Virgluls, spica meaning u
bheaf of corn. Beth these stars will set
a little after midnight en the 22d, 60 that
they must he looked for early In the even
ing. The next object that will attract atten
tion will be tbe great fixed etar Arcturus
in the western sky after 0 o'clock, It lies
off the haudle of the Dipper or tall of the
'Great Bear, Thisi star is distinguished
'as ene of the twenty whose distance from
I the earth has been measured. This dis
tance is se enormous that if the star
should be annihilated whlle you are looking
at it. twenty-five years and eight months
would have te pass before the fact could
be verified. That Is, It would take that
time befere lhjht starting from It en the
night of the 22d could reach the earth,
though coming at the rate of 200,000 miles
inn second of tlme. It takes fifteen figures
te give this distance in miles, thus: l&L
600.000.000,000, or one hundred and eighty,
fire trillion miles nearly.
East et Arcturus are Vega and Altalr, of
dazzling whiteness. The distance of
Vega in the Lyre is also known and it
takes light twenty-ene years and three
months te pass between It and the earth.
Altalr is the large control star of three in
a line In the milky way. The constella
tion is called Aquila, or the Eagle. Its
dlsluice Is net known.
Ntar the Lyre is the beautiful conste! censte!
lutlcm Cygnus, or the Swan. Its princl
pal stars form a cress, nprels thn.innMA
etar, Sixty-one Cygul. It is double, and it
takes light only six and a half years te
reach us from this sun. It is one of the
most beautiful telescopic objects in the
heavens, and a common three or four
feet telescope brings it out unely. Nexi
te Alpha Centauri In the southern
hemisphere this star is nearest of all te
us whose distance has been calculated
At midnight the Sweu will have passed
the meridian and be slew!) turning te
dive down below the western horizon.
De net forget the Pele Star, ale
double, and whose light is exactly fifty
years in reaching the earth. The pointers
of the Dipper guide you te It. it is the
only stationary star in the northern
hemisphere.
If you stay up until the eclipse ends
the great square of Pe-gasus will appear
in the northeast, followed by the uplendld
constellation Andromeda. -Te enjoy the
view thoroughly a little practice two or
three nights before the eclipse occurs
should be taken.
The phyllexera is threading in the vine
yards of California. Anether disease
called root ret has also appeared te old iu
tbe work of destruction.
The man who has a little mere te de
than he can attend te has no tlme te be
miserable. Unde Esek.
m!
A RCAL FAMILY HOW
King Milan and gtiecn Natalie of Bet-Tin
nnd the Crown Prlnce.
Queen Nat alie of Servla. who failed In .
her attempt te withheld the crown I
prince, her son, from his father's (King j
Milan's) possession, I n .Russian. She Is j
ene of the most beautiful wemen In J
,urope. nor miner is tne possessor ei
Immense estates In Htissla, and when his
daughter married Milan In 1875 she
brought blm a dowry of pome fl.OOO,
000. Her only child, l'rlnee Alexander,
the crown prince, whose possession lias
made such a stir, was born In 18?0. He
Is new, therefore, 13 years old.
According te the accounts, the queen
having been married, at once commenced
te Intrigue. Her first Bubject was her
husband, whom she persuaded te doclare
war against Alexandcr of llulgaria. But
Aloxander was the victor, and marched
his army after the demoralized forces of i
Milan toward tbe capital of Servla.
Milan ntiriltn trt flirt nvntAM s At.,.1-1..
for assistance, only te recelve a snub.
Hore comes In the work of the in
triguing queen. Early ene morning
ueunt ltuueirm von iineveniiuiicr, the .
Austrian amliassader te Servla, went te
Alexander and Informed him verbally Hint
If he continued his march te She capital
of Servla an Austrian army would march
In behind him. Alexander at ence aban
doned his purpose, and all Kurope wen i
dcred at his doing te. It turned out that
the ambassador had no authority for his
net, bnt that having ceme under the In
tluence T yueen JNntaUe he had carried
out her scheme te savn Servla. The am
bassador was punished by imprisonment,
and Queen Natalie from that day natur
ally became an object of suspicion among
the European rulers.
MILAN, KATALIC AND riUXCi: AIXXAXDISH.
Bismarck, especially, is net a man te
appreciate petticoat government. The
Iren chancellor has steed against all the
women of the Gerninn court for many
years, and it Is net Improhable that lie
would fall te sce the wisdom of Queen
Natalie's remarkable diplomatic stroke te
save Servla. When the queen reeently
made her residence at Wiesbaden and
when her husband asked the German gov gev
ernment te give hlin possession of thq
crown prlnce, Bismarck showed ids prefer
ences for niasculiue crowned heads by
informing the queen that she must either
glve up her son peacefully or by force.
Thcre is that sympathy for the queen
which the world will always glve a mother
deprl ved of her Mm. The queen may have
brought her misfortunes upon herself,
but she is certainly unfortunate, She
has been obliged te part with her son,
She has been erdnred from Cieimau ten I
tery aud she has been refused permission
te rcside In Austria. She might try
IliU'sln. Doubtless she has pnrtlsnni
there, but nil men except theso under
their influence distrust Intriguing women,
and tin) C7ai, perhaps, thinks he hasqulte
enough te de te take onre of the Nlhillsta
without harboring this lemaikable diplo
matic deceiver.
i'lie New l)urhr.
The newspaper linve printed rm end of
matter about Mrs. Lilly Hnmcrsly'fl mar mar mar
rlogeto the DiiUe of Marlborough, but
nene has published mi nuthentie cut nf
the new duchess till new. Many Inter
esting stfiries might be told, urebably, of
THE Dl'CniCSS 01' MAllLDOltOCCUI.
moving adventures of enterprising photo
hunters for her likeness, but The New
Yerk Graphic's man uns the only one te
succeed. The cut given with this is nu
excellent reduced reproduction of the pho
tograph from which Tite Graphic's picture
was mndO;
WAITING FOIl THC
DUQLC.
We Trait Ter the li'Hjle; tb night dews nre cold.
The tuute of ll.e KOliUer fl JaJdt ami eM,
The lltli et our lit eunc U luiljr na'l tunc
lucre la lend In our Joints, tuereU (rvM. Iu cur
Imlr
The future I clled nml Us fertuu. i unli wn
As we lie mhu liuslinl lrtutli til i Lle U
blew u
At the hound of tunt luiglc euch eumr-utp khall
trr!n
IJLe au arrow n)rnl from the fctralti of Ihe
Ullug
The reuraRti, the impul of jeutli (.hull ceme
hack.
Te banish the chill of the itr ar blteuac,
An 1 sorrow and lottes and cares fade neay
When that llfu Riving ulgiul rec!atua ih n
day.
Tlieuth th bivouac of uge may put k-e In our
veins,
And no fiber of lcel lu our tlnew remains;
Though the comrades of jestcrday match are
cot here.
And the aunllght seems pale and the branches are
tear
Though the sound of our clieertug dies down te a
mean,
We ahall find our lest jeuth when tlis bugle lit
bleun.
Themas Weutvrerth nigginsen In The Century.
rnllurm of Yeung Otuterc.
It Is encouraging te jeung speakers te
knew tiiat theie never Ims ln-cti, and
never tv ill be, Mich a thing ns a "born or
ator " There has nuu-r rt bteti ou in
stance of an orator bediming fatuous who
did net apply himself ns-ldimtwU a the
cultivation of IiIn nrt. Munv emi hud te
overcome great physu-al luiiiinul.-i that
rendered It almost hepvli-- ( ., d,,.,,, te
adept the career of u pul.l , sw.U.t 'Hie
best known instance u nlUi ,.f ivines-
thenes, who passed some in.uiili, ma cub-
terrenean cell, bluivlug eik. hi.- f Ids
I head se that he could net nppW r in public
1 He there practiced with peb'd, i h
i mouth te overcome n defect in i siMmv1i
and gesticulated lieiicntli hUMxmleii
bwerd te rid himself uf im uiiurtu-i ful
movement of the shoulder Ltui tlnu
he was hissed from the lx-iim m his tarty
efforts, but he pcrsoveied-the world
i ?,"ews,w,ih wliat s"c''',i When Itebert
W alpele first speke in the heuse of com
mons, he paused for want of words, and
continued only te stutter mid stammer.
Currun was known at ecIioeI n3 "stut
tering Jack Curran," and in a debating se
ciety which he joined, ns "Orator Mum "
Every ene will ulseieadily recall HUiaelis
failure when he rose te make his maiden
speech. Cobden's first effort was also a
humiliating fuilure. Qnce u Week
RHRPt PI
SOLDIER MD WtEMIKR.
THE FAMOUS FRENCHMEN WHO RE
CENTLY FOUGHT A DUEL.
lleulangcr, the r.-flriierl nnil i;rtnlillt.
T'elltlclan, nnit riequrt, the I'rln'ie Mln
litter Tim IVnenal nnd 1'ulitle HUtery
of Theio Sluch Talked or Men.
The spectacle recently prcsentcd te the
world of the premier of the Trench repub
lic and n prominent ex member of the
chamber of deputies fighting a duel with
cavalry sabers carries oue back a hundred
years in America te the period when
Hamilton nnd Burr fought near New Yerk,
b'loqiiet is ns distinguished In Trench as
Hamilton was In American politics, whlle
Beulanger may be considered the counter
part of Burr in sonie respects, though
iirebably net possessing Burr's talents.
With the Hamilton-Burr duel the cede
passed out among legislators In America.
At least Its decline was then begun. A
century after it Is as firmly fixed among
the great men of Tranee as it ever was.
Charles Themas Tloquet has thrce pre-
icssiens, in men
of which he is
distinguished. He
Is a politlcleu, n
lawyer and a jour
nalist. He was
born In 1827 In St.
Jean de Luz, in
the Lewer Pyre
nees. He studied
law and began Its
practlce in Paris.
His opinions wcre
Heme what ad
vanced, aud he
found a channel
rLOQurr.
for them in the
liowspapers. He was
connected with The Temps, The Siecle
(The Times and The Age) and ether jour
nals. In these he gave expression te such
radical views ns te bring the censure of
t lie government en the papers In which
they appeared. He advocated the cause
of the family of Victer Nelr after his
nssnsuiatien by Prince Piorre Boneparto,
nnd succeeded In jetting damages for
them. He also successfully defended
Cournet wheu he was tried for partlclpftt
lug iu the Communist plots of 1810. He
achieved his great notoriety confronting
Napeleon III and the late cznr of Russia
with the cry of "Vive la Pologne," or
"Leng llve Poland," for which he suffered
a few days' Imprisonment.
I'lequet was first elected te the cham
ber of deputies In 1670, nnd at ence be
came nn opponent of Hevallflt designs
upet the government. He was again
elected in 1862. In 1885, M. Brlssen hav
ing bon appointed prime mlnlttcr, Flo Fle
quet succeeded him as president of the
chamber of deputies. Last April he or
ganized a new cabinet for President Cor Cor
net, ut thu 1 j e.id of which he is at present.
i,
Oceiges Beulangcr was born at llcnnes,
Tranee, in 1837. Ills mother was au En
glish woman, and his boyhood was passed
partly in Nantus, and partly in Brighten,
England. He was graduated at the school
of bt Cyr as sous-lieutenant and assigned
te the Tlrst Algerian Tirailleurs. He
saw eorvice with his regiment In Algeria
and in Cechin China. At Rolfcrlne he
was shot completely through the body,
but receured. He wee promoted te be
captain and given the cress of the Legien
of Hener. In 16Gfl he became n professor
nt St. Cyr. lie married n cousin en ids
father's side, and itia wlfe being n great
English hnter Beulangcr never learned
the English langungu.
During the Trnnre Prussian war lieu-
lnngcr rose rapidly te be colonel. During
r$SBfe
me siege or rails
ills bravery wen
lilin the public
thanks of Gcu.
Treehu, who was
in command, and
promotion in the
yi.K iW lKlen of Hener.
SSiAyl A 'ew J'011" li,k'r
W CtV; 1,e l"'t'anip l w Iff-
.. . .AfevSr ndler guneral, and
was put in com cem
mnnd of a brlgade
of cavalry. Iu
1S91 he visited
the United States
villi the Trenclt
deputation te the
celebration nt
UOLI.ANfir.I!
Yin kt own On his return he was sent te
TiuiIk. In the De Treyciue .bluet he
was minister of war. As such he brought
tibeut reform in the mlmy and openly
made preparations for war. On the fail
of the Goblet ministry he retired te the
command of the Thirteenth army corps.
During this command he secretly lilted
Paris without a special permission, and
this yns made n pretest for ids dismissal
from the nnny by the government, to te
ward whom lie was politically opposed.
He wfcs immediately sent te the chamber
of deputies, nml demanded a revision of
the constitution In n bitter dobate he
called the premier an "Impudent liar."
Henee the duel.
J. (1. Ityitu.
When President Lincoln was assassin
nttd Jehn Sunatt tied the country. A
man wuose re re
st'inbhuce te Sur
ratt was remark
able was arrested.
He was thrown
lute prison, where
he was kept for
pome time en n
case of mistaken
i.iif it.- i; i ., . .. !
IVllUkllj WJUl-U 7.
men ims man, nyii
Jehn O. Ityau has
made claim
against the gov
ernment for false
imprlhonment.
llyan was cortoln certoln corteln
ly the victim, of a
great mistake. Cliaius were li voted around
his auklts by n blacksmith, aud he was
rnrrled about thus manacled His keeper,
he says, made "ft free chew" of him, and
he was ogled by hundred of people as
ene of the villains of the gieat assassina
tion plot.
Mr Kvnii litis net yet succeeded in
rushing bis claim te a successful issue,
but is still nt work nnd hopeful.
i:irctrle liullrnnil lu Operation.
An electric railroad Is in operation at
Asbury Park- The cars make the nalsoef
be mauy ceffee grinders. They nre lighted
by electricity, end when they pass ene
another en switches the cables that hang
down from overhoad have te be changed,
end all is plunged iu darkness. These
cables connect with little cars that run
ea wires ever the street, and they are for
ever getting off their little bearings nnd
stepping traffic. Oa the ether hand the
railroad Is nu endless route around the
town, and whoever pays five cents may
ride all the way, or even mnuy times
around, gettlnur the Journey nnd all tbe
eccoutrlcities of the read thrown iu free.
DUltrnt mill II Im ?Iaiiucrlpt.
Among nuthers noted ns early risers
must be included diaries Dickens. Ue
has told us hew the solemn and still soli
tude of the morning had a charm for him.
It was seldom that lie wrote befere break
fast. As n rule he confined his writing
between the hours of breakfnst and
luncheon Pickens was by no means a
rapid writer Wheu engaged en a novel
he regarded three of his net vor) lurge
pages of uumubcript a geed day's work,
uud four as excellent He did net rucepy
ids writings, although thny contained nu nu
inerens corrections which, however, were
dearly inade William Andrews in Heme
Journal.
Terrsu nml tin. Ilulnfitll.
President Willits. of the Agricultural
cellege of Michigan, w hile he disputes the
exerclse of a direct Iutluonce of forests iu
promoting moisture, sayiug that nil the
trees iu ihe world will net put it where
it Is net, believes that the moisture en the
continent is udveucing toward the west,
and that the planting of forests and in'
creased cultivation will cause the rainfall
te advance further west every rear
Seven hundred thousand acres of foret
have already been planted in Nebraska,
the cottonweed and the willow fiiM, and
thm the soft luaplu und the Lard weeds.
Public Opinion
SSft
l.!r7'MBf
l-JtJS
4fA- ?s1
RCT ? V
,W .S tW?
'Mrf's yvyiv
J O. AYASr.
SHE WAS LINCOLN'S SWEETHEART.
tier Katun 1 Mrs. Drennan New and Khe
lint Ilrarhrd n Oreeti Old Arc.
In Heney Orove county, Tex., there
lives a woman who mlssed an opportunity
te preside at the Wilto Heuso from 1800
te 16W, by having many years before re
fused te marry Abraham Lincoln. Mrs.
vviiiiarnurcnnau,
' tlie lady referred
te, was horn in
North Carolina In
1810, nnd when
qtilte young re
moved with her
parents te San
gamen county,
Xils. nlie was n
playfellow of the,
boy Abraham
fwhen he wero
knee breeches and
went barefoot. A
correspondent of
The Chlcatre Trl-
lilts. DIIE.VKAN.
bune reports her as having said with
reference te Linceln:
"He didn't knew much, as men areedu.
cetcd these days; but, lab, mol we used
te think him a compendium et knowledge.
And Mr Lincoln (simply 'Abe' then,
though) was n very apt scholar, always
ahead in his studies. He was a great
friend of mlne theso days and used te
'ce'ich' me, as my seu calls it."
The lady related a number of episodes
and then gave the same correspondent as
nbove an account of the proposal;
"It was early In the Bprlng of 1831, oue
evening when we were out walking, that
Mr. Lincoln asked me te marry liim, but
ns I had already formed an attachment
with and had premised te marry Mr.
Drennan, of ceurse I refused him. He
scorned te be nulte sorry, but In his genial
way said! 'Well, Martha, anyway, we
can always be ceed friends.' And we
"were I altvevs thought a -"crcat deal of
Abe, and hated te refuse him, but circum
stances were such that I was almost com
pelled te.
"One little incident," she went en, "1
never will forget. We all went te church
ene Sunday, a creek being nu the way,
ever which we crossed en two fallen legs.
Mr. Lincoln was net present during
church was away, I bellove, in Spring
field, Suveral of us girls had walked, as
it was a beautiful duy. But just before
church was out the sky clouded up1 and It
commenced te rain very hard. We girls,
at the conclusion of the service, wcre sit
ting in the church waiting for the rain
te ccase. when Mr. Lincoln redo up.
His mother had also attended ser ser
vlce, and en feet. After the rain was
evur, he assisted Mrs. Lincoln en te his
herse, saying he would walk home with
the girl", which he did. But when we
caine te the creek the legs had been
wnshed awey and the water was fully
thrce fret deep. What te de we dldu t
kuew, but young Abe did. He com
menced with me, and carried us all ever
Iu safety, till the last one, a very fleshy
gill, was only left ou the wrong sidi.
IIii waded through after her and took hijr
in Ids arms, staitlug ncress. We were
making all sorts of fun of them nnd
laughing gavly. when she. being a mis
chievous body, anyway, whispered some
thing te him which caused him te glve
cut suddenly te a loud peal of laughter,
when, somehow, the girl slipped from hln
arms, and both foil tint into the Water.
But it didn't spoil our fun In the least.
Why, bless your soul, when we suw the
two wee begone looking creatures rise
uud wade te the Bhere we laughed all the
mere, nnd se did they Theso were geed
old times, Indeed."
Had the glil known that the lank
country bumpkin beslde bur was te take
rank In the history of his country with
Washington, that he was te be the great
emancipator, the leader of the nation in
the greatest struggle of its history, she
might well have steed hresolute befere
turning him nwny.
Clmrgrd nitti Ilclng Dvuitmltrrs.
GT
is '.r,uin
W h
iwiii' fjr t
TSfcfc
oeddimi iurniinisEf.
EOWLES.
JUiODnrtlCK WILSON.
here are portraits of the men charged
with participation in the alleged dynamlte
plot ou the Chicago, Burlington and
tjuincy railroad. As has been fully set
forth In the telegraphic dlspatches, these
men are uccuscd of placing n dynamlte
cartridge en the Chicago, Burlington and
Quiney lailread track near the town of
Lela, a few miles from Aurera, ou or
about the 20th of May; also of placing
nuother cartiidge at Seuth Aurera, which
was exploded by a train passing ever it.
The cartrldge was placed In a one-elghth
Inch Iren gas pipe, and the plcces after
the explosion were secured and brought
into court.
Iho lletnll Drnsslt Life.
It is u popular error te bolleve that the
Hfe of ii retail druggist Is one long dream
of happiness, interrupted only by the
counting of the coin taken in during busi
ness hours, U00 per cent, of which is pro pre
lit It is true that there are many pro pre
scriptions filled unen which a lmnusome
return Is received, but only lu a small
way Patent medicines form a laige part
of the druggists' stock, and the manu
facturer of the patent nostrums reaps
mere from their sale than does the re
tall druggist, The well conducted, pro
perly appointed drug store has its full
complement of fancy goods for the toilet,
nnd for decorative as well as useful pur
poses. On this class of goods only a fair
profit Is made. Take from the receipts
the necessary expenses, rents, license,
salaries of empleyes and wear and tear, and
at the end of the year the average drug
gist Is lu geed luck if he has earned what
would be a geed salary for a skilled pro
fessional man, which he is compelled te be
hi his business. There is a popular
opinion that druggists make ulnoty-nlne
cents en every dollar takeu iu, but it la
a mistaken one. Ulobe-Demecrat
Tbr rtes( Train .Service
England has the fastest train scrvlce in
tlie world, as it has the heaviest read
beds, the heaviest nmeuut of trnfllc per
mile te handle aud the largest number of
populous centers within a email nren.
fhe United States comes next, a remark
i able fact, when we think that se much of
I the ground ever which our railways run
; is thinly populated, France comes next,
' Austria fourth, and last Of all comes Gcr-
; many, the country whose government has
iuum nusuimecomreioi us rnuwav travel.
Poultney lligelew in New Yerk Coin Cein
niercittl Advertiser.
Popular American I'll-1 Ien.
The American work of fiction that lias
had the crcntnst Kflln a Mr. Rtiiwrt.a
"Uncle Tem's Cabin. " Next te it comes
j "The Ijimpllgbter," a Bosten school
teacher's work, nnd has been through 00
editions of 1,000 copies each. The third
book en the ilst of successes Is Habber Habber
ten's . "Helen's Babies." New Yerk
World
Mmlent I'olUe TerM.
The threats of the Yale faculty te cur
tail thp athletic sports unless the boister
ous manner of celebrating victories lately
indulged in aie given up. have led te the
organizing of a student pollce force.-
Chicago Herald.
N4r iff
WaSHM$&
TW kl
ArnL A
LS ?4.
b&mm
V J
if.v r
ksm
(iff fW
WHITE ANT8 OF AFRICA.
A Vuer Creature, Blind nnd Unarmed
Tim J'lKbllnfj Jlcn yncen.
The whlte ant Is blind t it has many ene
mies, ami can never procure feed until it
comes nbove ground. Hew docs it selve
I II1U UIU1LU1LI 1, ,UHVB 11IU lUUIIU WUW
nieng wiiii u. i novo seen wuite enis
working en the top of n lilgh tree, and yet
it was underground. They took up some
of the ground with them te the tree top;
just as the Esquimaux heap snow up,
building it into the low tunnel huts lu
which they llve, se the whlte ants ceUect
earth, only in this case net from the sur sur sur
foce, but from seme depth underneath the
ground, and plaster it Inte tunneled ways.
Occasionally thcte run thrift the ground,
but morn often mount in endless ramifica
tion te the tops of trees, meandering
nieng every branch and twig, and here ana
thcre debouching Inte large covered cham
bers which occupy half tne girth of the
trunk. Millions of trees in seme districts
are thus fantastically plastered ever with
tubes, galleries, and chambers of earth,
nnd many pounds' weight of subsoil must
be brought up for the mining of even a
filngle trt-e.
Peering ever the growing wall ene seen
discovers ene, two or mere termites of
somewhat larger build, considerably
longer, and especially of the mandibles.
These important looking individuals saun
ter about the ramnart In the most leis
urely way, but jet with a certain air of
business, as if perhaps ene was the master
of works ami the ether the architect.
t They nre posted thcre as sentries, and
lucre nicy stand, or promenaile about, at
the mouth of every tunnel, llke Sister
Ann, te see If anybody is coming. Some
times somebody docs ceme In the shapi
of another nnt the real ant this time,
net the defenselessneuropteren, but seme
valiant nnd belted knight from the war war
llke fermlcldie. Single or in troops this
rapacious little insect, fearlcss lu lts'chtt lts'chtt lts'chtt
oneus coat of mall, charges down the trce
trunk, its antenna) waving defiance te the
enemy nnd its cruel mandibles thirsting
for tcrmlte bleed.
The worker white ant is a peer, do de
fensclcBS creature, and, blind and un
armed, would fall nn immediate prey te
these well drilled banditti, who forage
about in every tropical forest in unnum unnum
bcred legion. But nt t he critical moment,
llke Goliath from the Philistines, the
soldier tcrmlte advances te the fight.
With a few sweeps of Its scytheltke jaws
It clears the ground, and whue the attack
ing pai'y is carrying off its dead the
builders, unconscious of the fray, quietly
oentlnuo tlidlr work. Te every hundred
workers In n whlte nnt colony, which
numbers many thousands of individuals,
thcre are perhaps two of these fighting
men. The division of labor here is very
wonderful, and the fact that besides
these two specialized forms there are in
every nest two ether kinds of the same
Insect, the kings nnd queens, shewH the
rcmftrkable height te which civilization in
these communities has attained.
Tiicse mounds are built into a mesh
work of tunnels, galleries nnd chambers
where the social interests of the com
munity nre attended te. The most
epacieus of these chambers, usually far
underground, is very properly allocated
te the head of the society, the queen.
The queen tcrmlte Is n very rare insect,
nnd as there are seldom mere than one, or
nt most two, te a colony, and as the royal
apartments are hidden far in the earth,
few persons have ever seen a queen, and
indeed most. If they did happen te come
ncress it, from its very singular appear
ance, would refuse te bolleve that it hail
tiny ccimcctieu with white nuts. Hex ene
duty iu life is te lay eggs, and it must be
confesscd she discharges her function
with complete success, for iu ft single day
her progeny often nmeunts te many thou
sands. Pall Mall Gazette
I'lpnused mi Indian Trlucc.
At the studio of a young portrait painter
I faw yesterday n picture which was very
curious lu its subject. It contained two
upright figures ene that of a swarthy
Indian jnjah covered with jewels and
wearing n star of India upon his breast,
the ether n tall and lovely English girl el
about 18, in a pink dress, her hair
feathered behind her by n ribbon and fall
ng loeso again. The rajah Is Smiling the
smile of pond possessershlp, nnd the
j eung girl Is looking with ft somewhat
bewildered air nt her future lord. They
nre two real people. She is the daughter
of an English chemist, nnd her parents
have consented te her mnrrlnge with the
rnjah, who, after the ceremony, will take
her out te his dominions.
One instnnce of such marringe between
Chrisllnu maid and pagan man Is very
well known, and has turned out n decided
success. A Miss King, the daughter of a
governor of an English jail, mairied about
thirteen years nge "the shereef of Oran,"
who is tne spiritual head of the empires
of Morocco. The shereef, who is a de
scendant of the prophet, en marrying
Miss King, renounced all his ether wives,
whom he ledged lu an asylum at Tangier,
which it is a part of his duty te keep up
for the refngees from the secular power,
nnd he moreover gave te his seu by his
Christian wife the sacred stick, the pos
session of which tit the tlme of the
shereef's death determines the succession
among his children te his bacred office and
great possessions. Londen Letter.
Dnd for IIli Stomach!
Sam Harrison, a young man w he has
been n glabs cater in dime museums for
years, is in Hollevuo hospital. He is ill of
ncnte Indigestion. The trouble was
caused by his abnormal diet. His glass
eating, nevertheless, was, In a measure,
tricky. His performance consisted in
taking a gebiut, passing it around among
the spectators te let them be convinced
that it was genuine glass, and then biting
out large rueuthfuls from the edge of it,
which he crunched aud ground between
hlsteethand finally swallowed. Witnesses
of the feat usually watched for ovidence
that he kept the broken glass in his ineuth,
and waited for an opportunity te spit It
out, but he always wound up by drinking
copiously of water, In n manner which
seemed te preelude such retention.
narrisen is se sick from the disorder of
his stomach that he will net return te
the rauseums, nnd se he was-wllling te
tell the attending phvsician hew his glass
eating was done, 'j'he goblet was net
glass, but was composed of a tinnsparent,
brittle composition of lcingl.i-s aud slli
cite Tin1, h ' tin. fii ling und appear
n nee of glns, uud tin- difference could net
be dcteiuil bj nn iitespert examiner. The
substance was pretty hurd, however, and,
chew it ns he might, it went Inte his
stemnch in n Mnie net nt nil coiiituclve te
hcnltli lirndunll) a bietigb' . (.ut,
tritis, end this is what nils him uew. He
will never chew imitation glass again uu
til somebody Invents a less haruitnl com
position. New Yerk Cor. Chicago Herald.
Against KitWr nnd I'erbs.
The ether dny n wandering paragraph
drew attention te a wealthy wemau in
New Yerk who is gradually doing i
with the conventional knife and fork at
her banquets, and substituting instead ei
theso generally regarded as necessary im
plemeuts for dining fanciful daggers and
miniature bwerds, enriched witli jewels
nnd nrt weik Ter instanee. rose- el
tinted enamel, with the end of the stem
provided w ith two convenient thorns ei
geld te be ued ns a fork, the re&e beinj;
the candle The lady argues that erdi
nary knives and forks were intended fei
tbe'days geno by, when the dinner parties
of soclety included hnunrhes of venison
and mutton served in huge Mires te the
guests and requiring substantial lnstru
meul for the subdivision of the slices
into morsels suitable for the meutli
"These were days of gross hospitality,
nnd the table necessities were in keep
lng," observes the anti-knife aud fork
hosteis. "1 am net sure thnt the Chinese
de net show exquisite taste in thelr use el
chop blicks." San Trancibce Argonaut.
In Ills J'aver.
Hebbs There's ene thing I can say
about Brown, that is, he'b generous te a
fault.
Blebbs Yes, when the fault don't be
long te ether folks. Detroit Tree Press.
Had newspapcrs been Invented befere
the English language, the word ' cal
umny" would undoubtedly have been
ppelled. 'rcelumny.'' Harper's Bazar.
An Important Announcement
Abent Mr cnti age, white t bnttnm.1
(udrtretr mtaekMi with ascracUUnf
ltni In mr feet, kneet and bands. leHwt
Ih stuck that I leek tnj b1 IremwUkUlj.
ad In two or thrr days dit jetnuwer
wellen 10 nlmrxt double tbtlr natural !,
a1 alrepwa driven from me. AftrauSer
1st the meat excruciating pain for a week,
ualnc liniments and various ether remedies,
a friend wlielnipalhlxed with mj helpless
condition, aald te mat ...
"Why don't you aet Bwtft'i Spectne nd
UMlt. I will nannies curs, and If It does
ntn 1110 meaicins aeau een 70U neiniDs.
I at once aecnre.1 the &. ft. B- ana art
I at once secured the 8. ft. B andi after
nle It the nrtt day, had a quiet nlsbt and
tffreihlns sleep. In a week I felt sreetlr
leneeited. In three weeks I could sit up ana
walk atMxit the room, and after nslBa six
ueiuce was out sua auie w su w dusiucm.
BIncettien 1 hats been regularlr at my pest
of duty, and stand en my feet from nine te
ten hours a day, and am entirely free from
rain. These are the plain and almpla facta
Inmyeaie, and I will cheerfully aniwer all
Inqulrlri telltlrs thereto, either In person or
bytnall. Tnenis manruja,
, It W. th meet. New Verk Cltf.
N Atn-nttr, Invl bars warded off a a
vere attack of rheumatism by a timely resort
te Bwlft'a sprclOe. In all casee where a per
manent relief U sought thl medicine com
mend! Itself for a constitutional treatment
that thoroughly eradlcaut tb cods of dis
ease from the system.
1 Ilev. W. P. lUutser, O. D.
' Nr.w Tem, SI Trn At. After spending
20U te be rtllered of liloed I'olsen without
any benent, a few liotUesef Swift's Bpeclne
worked a perfect cure. O. Peans.
Viikia, Oa. My little alrl, aged sir, and
toy, aged four years, had acretula In tha
worst aggravated ahape. They were puny
and sickly. Today they are healthy and ro
bust, all the result of taking 8. B. 8.
Jee T. COLUU.
Liny Lai. Scstren Ce., Fi-i.-Tour 8. S,
R has proved n wonderful eaccess In my
ense. The cancer en my face, no doubt,
would have seen hurried me te my grave. 1
de think It It wonderful, and has no equal.
U. It. IltaD, Postmaster.
Wace, Tixu, Way 9, 1SS3.
6. R. Ce., Atlanta, Oa.t
Oentlemen-Knewlngthat yen appreciate)
voluntary testimonials, we take pleasure In
stating that one uf our lady customers has
retained her health hy the use of four large
bottles of your great remedy, after having
been an In valid for several yrara. If er trouble
waa extreme debility, caused by a disease pe
culiar te her sex. wit.ua A Ce , Druggists.
Three tioeks mailed free en application.
All druggists tell a. a. s.
Jnr Swift Brrcifie Ce.,
Irawrr9, Atlanta Oa.
hew Yerk.iM Ilreadwty.
H'iVKcf AND hmt'OKK
QUBOWN ilKANl).
SPECIAL.
....,.,-
rvvD i-iarvT
Xj,lfrM.91ltL.MfXatii
zmiuwiiiim ij'-.
"OUR OWN BRAND"
TOW BALK 11Y
H. E. SLAYMAKEH,
Ne. 20 East King Btroet,
LANGA8TEII, PA.
HUM31KR UKHORTH
C CHICAGO CO ri'AUK,
J Mltlt IIIK HK.V01I,
l'JliKKNTtrOKYAVi:, ATL 'MTlUllirr.N.J.
UOMLLIKU.KI.f.UANTUUlHlNK.
H7-3tnaTu,lbft- Mils. JOHN A. HI' AH L.
KL.A.VEN HOUSIii
ATLAMIItl C1TV.
Atlantic and Couneetleut ave-ui WILL
HOWmc, Werk J. W. UUUIIAK Kit, Prep.
Teruia-12.00 10 litO pur Ony. )e21 lind
pUK
"OHaLreNTK,"
Ocean End of Neilli 'arelltm Avouue,
ATLANTIC Ull'Y N. 1.
r, UOlSUltTSA H()m. nprtt-iuid
A
TLANTIO Oil Y-.
I'llEHTGIl COUNTY HOUSE,
1 liU tboreuKlHy cottileitutilo 11 ml well
known houe 13 new npen. 'Awonty-etftMh
(eiwen. HlUl innnuKOinfiit. l.'oel und de
lightful locution very liunr lli pen.
jiliiU-Sind J KM. HI A BON 6.
a TtiANTlO OtTY, N. J.
HOTEL NORMANDIE,
(fortrerly Hetel Asttlunrt.)
-NOVV Ul'KN.-V
UlSr'UUSIt5HKI. - UKMODELKI).
HKNOVATKU
JOB. It KLANIOEN, Jr.
uin,rl.Jirirl-lli-,Api,July,.Mit.
A ThANTlO CITY, N J.
'1MB MANSION.
ATL .TlOClTi.M. J
ijirKO'l Most Convetilont - otel. Mtwintly
ru 'il'bi'd. lbetnllv Munuiil Oeach teand
from lluiichuud rinlna ercheHtra vlti'.la
UHAA. RltuLAUrC, Pi Op.
V K CtXlUBAN. t hlel Cl- k tl'tl.'Wtllld
ATT. OKIiTNA 1'AKK.
Mt. Gretna Park,
ruu. Kxcuitaie.vri anii pienics.
This P'rk 1 loeilod In tha heart of the
Seuth Me 11 una . ea the line of Iho
Cor. w 01 l.el).meti ICiiilrnals
Nine nilirn 'euth pi tint 1 Ity of Lebanon,
within tiHgydlstaiiCH of llurilvburx, Keitdlnir,
LunoiBter. Oeluuibli uml all point en the
Phll&delphht A liuadliiK " I'ennsylvanla
iiiillnuds Tim i;il.uiii1- i.re lurK, covering
hundreds of acres, nl are
rilK.tC lO AL-
ThocenvuutoiictHO'iia ure Damlnir i'.
vlllun, nBp cleus IHnlKg llntl, ihe Kitchens.
liauBUKO and tout llo-en , whlle ihe iinun.e
itiKiiU iiraiiimtmints conalstef Lrequetund
Hull UleiiiidH, Hewling Alley, ShoeiiuK ual ual
lery oiielt, Kti, n-'0 la'ilfs ler Lunch-re,
II it t te emu nnd ll"iiehs ure gcalUTed
throimheul the Kreunilg.
TIIKblAl'hH PLKItANUK
Of the National tna'rt it ri'iinaylvanln has
bren lev-utcd nt Mt i-ritiia, and tn Hillary
Kltte Practice, treui tin utiitie ut the ItatiKH,
will censtltutu a new a'lluo.leu tu vlslteis.
Anether alinie' ten U
LAKKUONKW AUO.
Covertnn niatly twetity uctei mi which am
placed a ntimuer of e iaut new HeaU, und
alenir the banks of which me ploeeaut walks
aud lovelj- sctmery.
OliaSIU'A! 1ON0A11S
Will be nut en the line el thu I'ernwnll A Leb
anon Hal teuil, or T.111 be itiut.te aillorenl
p dins, wh-ii prcll'uljlc. ter tbe nccomtueda.
11011 et uxuurslen paittus 'lhey ure Bate,
pleasant uud couvenluut.
Purtlt'SdtHliiiitfUcau procute Meals ut tbe
1'irk, asthH Dlnlnc 1111 wt I be uudur thnsu thnsu thnsu
norvlilen of K M HOLT., "f the Lnbanen
Valley ene. Tbeee who wish te spend a ilay
in the Mountains cu And no plae se beauti
ful or arferdlnit mi iuueU pleaMure as Mt.
eietua .11 IMOXI- ATlG ulll.NKS AL
LO KOOV'UIK I'KKMibKS
J Te- Kxcrsleu Uutttsttiid Oeriursl Infor
mant n, apply te ,,,
NED IRISH,
Bup't C. A J-. Ual read, Lubaneu, Pa.
je2S-9md
fcg'l'l!?1
VSS 11
aK a
M 1 "IM
i2a2lllSsSgssssS
TMAVMLMM BVJBM.
TEAD1NQ A COLUMBIA K. K.
Ajrransremeiit of Pagsenrer Trtisi en. u
sUUr,aUMUAI,ItATlS,lSM.
. SOUTHWARD.
AemY j, j . h m ys
fi"SS?' ue 780 Itn IH
Colombia. 130 ,,M I0
Arrive at'
alB"r 9M S.M tM
BOUTHrTAaD.
"JT- .iS iiM '.
Mj"r.ttJniictlen 9.04 im
Cblckle 113a get,
OelambU -..,9x7 me 8.K
Uuuuuu..... 98) i.t m
Kins; Btraet, Lane 9.T) aUeivtei 8.
gnarryvUle 10.S) JJi 9 11
Ler. 80NDAT'
Suiryvuiuri .luskm,
lng Htrret, Lane., at 8.M a. m., ana Lit p. m.
Arrive at
Bending, 10 10 a. m, and tM p. m.
Keadlna; at 7 20 a. m., and 4 p. m
Arrive at
King street. Lane., at 9 SO a. m., and UOp, a
QnarryylUe, at 6.40 p. m.
4arTra!ng connect at Heading with tratnt te
and from Phtladelplila, Petbjvllle, Uamgriunr.
Allentewnand Mew Yerk, Tla Bound Broek
Bonte.
At Onlumbla, with trains te and from Yerk,
Hanrver, Uettyiburg, rrederlek and BaJU BaJU
mere. At afatietu Junction with tratnt te and
from elilckles.
AtManhelm with trains te and irem Leba
non At Lancaster June-Inn, with tralni te and
from Lancaster, Quart) vine, and Chleklea.
A. H. WILeOM Bnperlntgnaant.
LEBANON A L.ANOAHTKR JOINT
LINKl.All.KOAU.
Arrangement of Passenger Train en. and
after, Behdat, Mat 18, 1888.
NOETHWARD.
Leave a.m. r.u.
Onarryvlile.
King Street, Lane.. 7.00 11 n
Ineutcr 707 123
Hanhelm 783 1.18
Cornwall 7.69 143
Arrive at
Sunday.
P.M.
a xf r.u-,
B.IR
BM
6.0?
880
668
80S 8.58
8.18 4,04
8.4S B.16
(UT 8.U
982 5.M
Lebanon 8.11
SOUTHWARD.
Leave a x.
Lebanon 7 11
Cornwall , 727
Manhelte 7.58
Lancaster. 8 27
IM 7.10
r m.
12 80
12.45
1,14
148
T.tt
AM. M.
7.S5 8.48
810 4.03
8.40 9.16
9.11 6.48
7l
7.48
8 IS
8 47
arnre at
King street. Lane.. 8.S 1.B6
A. M. WILSON, 8upt B. ss O,
B. B.MErr, Bupt O. It. U.
8.B019 20 IM
BaUread.
ENNSYbVANU UAILHOAD
BCHr.DULK.-In effect Irem June 11,
1888.
Trains lkivi Lakeartmr ana Ihsta anri r.
rive at Philadelphia as fellows :'
WKSTrVAttTJ.
Pacific Kxpress)
News Kxpresif
Way Passengr
MalltralnvlaMt.Jeit
me 2 all Trait (.....
Niagara Kzpress
Banever Accem
rest Llmt
rrederlek A ccein ...
Lancaster Accem....
llarrlabnrg Accem. .
Ce'umbla Accem .
Harrlaburg Kxprra-)
Western kxpresf) .
KA8TWAKI)
Pblla. Kxpresif
("nst Llntf
llnrt-lahiiriv hvnM.ri
Philadelphia.
Lancaster,
1 1 : i.i p. in ,
4 SO a lit.
4:'t0a. m.
7 en n m .
i:mm., m,
6:B a m.
0:S0a. m.
9:U a. m.
0ia m.
B.rea. m.
95 a m.
20 p.m.
AlOp. m.
2.5i p. m.
6:10 p. m.
7:40 n. tn.
7:90 n. m.
via Colombia
7:40 a m.
via Columbia
1l"n m.
via Columbia
vlaMt Jey
z;m p. jn.
a :I0 p in.
B-Sip. in,
9:50 p. iu.
Leave
Lancaster.
2.-:ea in
ccsa. in.
8:1n a. in.
3.55 a. m.
9:Of. a. m,
11:30 a. m.
12.01 p. m .
t:0"ti m.
8l0p, tn.
4:45 p m.
fi:45p. m.
11:10 p in.
lArrlva at
Phlla.
4.4) a. m.
S:Al m.
Lancaster Accem....
10.70 a. tn
VUM1J07
ll:45a. m.
uumuiuia jiccetn..,
Atlantle JCxpresst...
Beashore Kxpresn.. ,
Philadelphia Accem,
Miniday Mall
Uny Kxpressf
ttnrrigbnrir Aernitt.,
l:S5 p.m.
8:15 p. m.
6.00 p. m.
B:5p. m
6:Vi p. m.
9:45 p, m.
'iiieLuuiaxter Aetouimedtlon leaves uar
rlebiirgat8:IOp.ni., and arrives at Lancaster
nt!).:-5p m.;
The Marietta Accommodation leaves Colum
bia at B.40 a. m and reaches Mailetta at. 6.55.
Alse leaves ( nlu bin at 11:15 a. m., aud 2:10 p.
tn.. l-eacblng Stirletta at 12.01 and 2:55. I taves
Marietta at 8.05 p. in , and arrives at Columbia
3.20 1 also, leaves ut 8.3) and arrives at 8 te
The Yerk Accommodation leaves Marietta
at 7:10 and arrives at Lancaster at 8:nn, con
necting -with Harrliburg Kxpress at 8:10 a.m.
'I he Frederick Accommodation, wes', con
necting at Lancaster with ast Line, west,
at 2:10 p. m , will ran through te rrederlek.
1h rrederlclt Accommodation, east, leaves)
Columbia at 12:25 and reaches Lancaster at
12:51 p in.
HntTlsbuig Accommodation, west, connects
at Columbia for Yerk
Hanover Accommodation, east, leaves Col
ombia at 4:10 p. in. Arrives at Lancaster at
4.xn p. m.. connecting with Day express.
Hanover Accommodation, west, connecting
at Lancaster with Niagara Kxpress at 9.60a,
in., win iun through te Hanover, dally, ex
cept Sunday ; also connects at Colombia for
tale Harber.
Kast Line, west, en Sunday, when flagged,
will step at Oownlngtewn, Ceatesvllle,
I'arkesburg, ML Jey, Xllznbetbtewn and Mid
dletnwn. 1 1 he only trains which run dally. On Sun
day the Mall train west runs by way of Col
umbia. J. U. WOOD. Genaral Passonger Agent.
CHAB. xt. PUUll, Uoneral Manager.
BAHT UAKItJAUKi.
ulNN BKKNKMAN.
F
100
Different Patterns
or
BABY GARRLA&ES
-AT-
FLJNN & BRENEMAN.
" Ala-ska " Refrigerators
UAVJS NO EQUAL
mm & ,iKhMAh,
Ne. Ib2 North Queen Btrevt,
LANCABTKU PA
U04L
B
AUMUAKDNKK'a COMPANY
GOAL DEALBRS.
1-
Orns:-Ne. let Ninth yuoeuf treii, und Ne.
wt North Prince Btreet.
y.anca: North Prince street, neartw-sding
oeret,
nriril0 LAMlAP1R. pa
B
H. MAKTIN.
Whelesalnnnii Itetull Dt-alurlnall kinds of
LUMIIKK AND UOAL.
sr Yard Ne. 420 North Water and Prlne
HtroetH. above l.umen Lancaster nHyd
y umiu:h, COAL, Ae.
LUMBER, COaL
AD
ROOFING SLATE.
G. SENER & SONS,
PltlNCK AND WAL.NLTSIS.,
Bell Ceal et the llmt Quality at II10 I ewfxt
Prl s. liuy no"-, us It uiuy be hlgter.
JtSOttd
N illlCK TO TKKHrMMrJKRS AND
flUNNKUa. All pa remit a- hereby for
bidden te trespesi en my it 'hi lands e tht
Cornwall and epncdwel' etat-s tu el)wu or
Lancs'tcr cenntlFa, wht-lhi r t-icltO 01 inln inln inln
oleeod, rtlber ler the purpr.a el 1ijUiii 01
flablnc, is the law 111 l rlgilly enrcrr-d
against all trespassing en a&ld Urclt n tk 1 -designed
nftnr this notion.
WM. COLIMAM rilEBUAH,
IL PSSUY ALUKN,
IKDV7, 0.riiiAN,
Atiarniys toi.&.W.ceiman'i.lUii