Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, August 04, 1888, Page 3, Image 3

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THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENOER, SATURDAY; AUGUST? 4, 1888.
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A SIGN OF TUE TIMES?
THE FUNERAL OF THE LATE MR.
COURTLANDT PALMER.
A ChrUtlan Mlnliter nml un Agnostic
emdatcil ami tlio.Itedy waa Cremated.
Dees Any Special Significance Attach te
These FecUT
The late Courtlandt Palmer was an ag ag
nestle, a political liberal and an amateur
In science, a rich man socialist, nnd the
founder of the noted Kluctceuth Century t
uuu. iiuucn, it. uipcrseu is me ruueu
mero noted orator and agnostic, whose bo be
llef is se nearly a complete negation of all
belief that he is pleased te be iilcltnnmed
"Pagan Deb." llev. llicliard Hebcr New.
ten Fs a noted clergyman of the Kpiscepal
church, wliose tendency of recent years
has been toward latitudinarianlsm in be
ItCf aud cxtrcme liberalism in association.
And, finally, cremation is the scientific)
disposal of the dead by incineration, a
method which has se gained favor of late
that almost every city new has its crema
tory. Thcse four statements serve te In
troduce the relation of en affair which
vividly illustrates certain tendencies of
thought in the United States, especially
in New Yerk.
The rich and seml-Eeclallsl agnostic bade
his friends farewell wit h all the calmness of
ESecratcs, took an amesthctic and died; his
body was burned
nt Fresh Pend,
Leng Island; Itcv.
Hebcr Kowton
officiated rollg rellg rollg
leuslyforthofam ily, and Uebcrt G.
Ingersoll, by re
quest of the de
ceased, delivered
the farewell ora era ora
tlen consigning
the departed te
the eternal forces
of nature, werlcar,
thev might, and
exhorting the
mourners te the
COUnTLANDT I'ALMEII.
effect that If thcre
was small reason te hope, there was cer
tainly no reason te despair. Mr. Palmer's
mede of death was net a suicide, unless It
may be called be when n man prepares for
a surgical operation with but euc chance
in a hundred that he may survive It; yet
he went te his death with a calmness and
firmness no Greek or Ileman stoic ever ex
celled, and both the oration of the great
agnostic and the sermon of the minister
were In harmony with the life and death
of their subject and net out of harmony
with each ether. The wliole affair is well
worthy of study.
Courtlandt Palmer was bera in New
Yerk In 1843, of an old Dutch family, as
his first name indicates, and was brought
up in the Dutch Reformed faith, but eaily
becatne a frce thinker. He was educated
at Williams cel lege and graduated at
Columbia Law school. Inheriting a for
tune, he gave himself te travel and study,
and seen btcame an advanced radical en
most subjects. Though wealthy, he was
much mero a socialist than is the avcrage
workingman, and devoted his entire time
te literary pursuits, chiefly in aid of his
radical vievva. He adopted the motto of
Cicere, "As I am a man, everything per
taining te man concerns me." He there
fore advocated the establishment of closer
relations between the different section') of
society; was an ardent supporter of
schools for technical training; encouraged
associations of laboring men; and te fur
ther promote discussion feunded, in 18S0,
the Nineteenth Century club. A million
aire he labored in the Interest of the peer;
a man of distinguished connections and
nrlstocratlcasseclation"?, he boldly opposed
the execution of the Chicago Anarchists;
a man of singularly pure lite and austere
morals, he opposed the methods of An An
teony Comstock; and, denying the truth
of all evangelical creeds, he went te his
death, with a clear mind, as jieaccfully as
a wearied child sinks te sleep. Aud,
strangest of all perhaps, though in such a
career he antagonized many in their most
cherished beliefs, he rarely Incited hostil
ity aud still mero rarely inade a personal
enemy.
After withdrawing from the Dutch Ho He
formed church Mr. Palmer adopted the
philosophy of Cemtc, and was therefore
popularly called apesltlvlst. IIe assisted
In founding the "Society of Humanity,''
the Manhattan Liberal club and the Kicu
HcllKieus association, was iitesldcnt of
the New Yerk Cre
mation society and
the American bee
ular union, aided
in setting up the
liberal journal
called "Man," and
finally founded
the somew.iat
aristocratic Nine
teenth Century
club, "with vlew
te making mental
liberty fashion fashien fashion
nble." Aud he
succeeded. M e n
imd women of all v
shades of belief,
from President"
McCe'h te Beb In
it. liunuu nkwiex.
gersell, and" from Julia Werd Howe te
Governer Geerge Headly, took part In
the discussions; and the "chuich cle
ment," as it was called, was se well satis
fied that many of its representatives insist
that the frce platform of the club must
be maintained as a sort of memorial of the
deceased. Of course, however thcre hav'e
been jars among the members of the club,
and ene of them, following clese upon Mr.
Palmer's expressed sympathy with the
Chicago Anarchists, camu near disrupting
the club.
Rev. Illchard Heber Newton was born
in Philadelphia Oct Ul, 1810, was gradu
ated from the University of Pennsylvania,
and ordained a deacon in St. Paul's church,
Philadelphia, before he was 20 jears
old. Iu 1SGU he was ordained priest, und
after short terms of service elsovvhcre be
came rector of All Seuls' Protestant Kpis Kpis
eopal church In New Yerk city. He has
been a voluminous writer, and his wirks
In order of time, from IbTi te 180, plainly
show a steady chauge hi his theology He
followed the usual course. First maintain
ing that there are "degrees of inspira
tion," neTt, that "the Bible contains the
Werd of Ged and much mero," then that
the Werd of Ged is found in many ether
books besides the Bible, and finally that
there is no such thing as a perfectly pure
revelation, but the Werd of Ged comes
te us like every ether geed gift, rniwrt
with dress or chaff, which it is our task te
painfully eliminate. Iu 1882-83 he preach
ed a series of sermons, iu which he main
tained that many ether books wcre as
truly inspired as the Bible, including in
that list many be called Oriental scrip
tures. This brought en him ecclesiastical
censure and a church trial, and slnce that
date his position, te the secular eve, id
net far from that of the German Ration
alists. This characterization might be
disputed by the reverend gentlemau aud
his friends, and it is possible the secular
eye is net trained sufficiently for the
C roper distinctions; sufilce it te say that
i his final summary, or "Study of Gee
e3ls,"Mr Newton maintains.
That none of the Pentateuch was com
pleted till GOO years after Met.es' death,
the law was net given by inspiration, but
was a growth, and the history back of
F.zra is largely fabulous; the elder patri
archs were ' fabulous demigods of Semitic
legend." Niinred was an allegory, Adam
a simile, Abraham a composite, the lives
of several sheiks condensed into one, the
Heed a pruse poem, the tower of llabel
fimply a Hebrew rendition of the Babylo
nian tower of Bel which they had seen in
exile, und the whole Boek of Genesis n
loeso compilation of old traditions and
manuscripts m unskillfully put together
that Shem outlives Abraham, though the
latter died very aged, and two contradic
tory accounts are given of the creation.
Such, as near, we repeat, as the secular
vnilnd can comprehend it, is the "faith" of
the"Feverend gcntlumtm who very appro
priately joined "Pagan Beb" in such "re
ligious" ceremonies" as wcre fitting at the
incineration of an ogrestic
When the body of t'etirtlandt Palmer
VT ""if atT
Jzkt
pasw
p
tery aETfesITPend, Leng Island, the wrl
tcr made inquiry nnd was much aston
ished te learn the cxteat te which faith
in and practice of incineration has ox ex
tended. Net only is there a cremation
society In cvpry great city In Christen
dom, but thcre are hundreds of cremato
ries, large and small, and many thousand
bodies have been cremated. Strangest
of nil, perhaps, though the Cat helle
church does net favor It, the practice baa
gained most rapidly In Jtaly. One fur fur
uace in. Milan has consumed seme l.COO
rncsn tend cnutATenv
bodies, and In Reme, almost within the
shadow of the Vatican, a large crematory
Is Iu almost dally use.
In the United States the progress of
the movement has astonished its warm
est advocates. When Dr. Ixj Meyne built
the first crematory at Washington, Pa.,
there was much tiilk of appealing te the
law te step him, and the first incinera
tion of n cerpse was published in all the
papers as a sensational item; new there
nie incinerations almost dally, and cre
mation societies are se numerous that the
public no longer consider them. The
Fresh Pend, Leng Island, crematory,
opened Dec. 4, lbStf, hns already con
sumed 200 bodies, hal f of these being these
of Germans, as that peeple generally favcr
the process.
Of Hen. Rebert G. Ingersoll's remarks
ever the cellln of Courtlandt Palmer it
can only be said that they were in the
very highest style of pagan oratory. II
had net the Inspiration which moved
Pericles in the wonderful address ever
the Athenians who fell in battle, yet
there is a remarkable similarity bctweeu
tfce two addresses, and Ingersoll's is the
uncr. no naa te
confess that he
knew as llttle of
the present state
of what was
Courtlandt Palm
er as Cicere knew
of theso he
mourned, and yet
the oration Is
mero touching
than that of Cico Cice
ro. Julius Cwsar
confessed In the
it. a. iNotneeLL.
Reman scnate that he considered death
the end of all activities, and Ingersoll only
s. ys that no ene can knew the centrary:
yet he bays it in a mournfully sweet
English with which the ponderous and
sonorous Latin of Cejsar cannot be com
pared. Secrates, like Courtlandt Palmer,
said he could dle without fear, because it
was silly te fear that of which we could
have no knowledge, nnd Ingersoll vlr
tually says the same; but Plate and
Xcnophen could reason themselves into
the faith that Secrates still lived, and
our modern pagan fails even of that.
His oration Is indeed mournfully sweet,
but it is at the best a negation; he can
only tell us that we need net despair, he
cannot bid us te hepe.
J. II. .BuAm.n.
MR. RANDALL'S RESTING PLACE.II
Cnslnnea, Near Wayne, Te., nnd Its Ad
vantages. Cnstancn, Mrs. Ballangee Cete's coun
try house, near Wuyne, Pa., where It is
hoped Mr. Randall will regain his health,
la admirably situated for such a purpose.
The place overlooks the Chester valley
and Valley Ferge, and in the distance the
highlands abeve Con Cen Con
fihehocken. The nlr
Is pure and cool, nnd
V?Hl J1U1U uu 111-
ft fel valid may be expected
V. SW"- SV te Lave a. much bet.
icrchauce for health
than In the het city
BAMl'LI. J IIAMJU-I,
LAISTAXEA.
of Washington. Iiidccd, whenever ft
premlueut man in that city Is prostrated
by disease iu the summer season it is con cen
si'deri'il absolutely essential that he be to te
moved. Piesident Garfield, after haing
been shot by Guitcau, was taken te F.I F.I
heren, N J., and Gen. Sheridan, who has
been suffering with heart trouble, was
taken by beat te Nonquitt, Mass., where
he new is. It is expected that Mr. Ran
dall will remain at Castauea during the
summer.
C'uiieu l.'iileiii In ruimniu.
One of the most curious customs that
attract the attention of strangeis in
Panama is te sec the native women walk
ing along the street smoking long, blen
der cigars iu much the fashion that men
de here. It is the custom of the women
there te gather in the public-, markets aft
early us sunnse te gossip and tulk ever
affniis while enjoying their morning
fcuioke. As there ure few newspapers in
Panapia, and a proportionately small
number of readers, the market Is the
place where the news of the town is te he
learned. New Yerk Evening World.
A llurrilile rnnllilllly.
Editor I see the clerks In dry goods
nnd grocery stores are forming an early
closing lneicmcnt. Wrlte a stirring edi
torial standing up for the clerks and da da
neiinciug tueir heartless, grasping em em
plejers Assistant I netice that n similar movn mevn
racnt lias also been started by the poorly
paid nnd owrwerked bartenders.
"I'h? Whu I Guess you'd hotter write
en the tariff today " -Omaha Weild.
Hiiro Hum fur Wilier Supply.
The stupendous plan for supplying
the city of Liverpool with water involves
the lemevul of u whole Welsh village, in
cluding weeds, cottages, churches, etc.,
this immense space te be devoted te a reser
v elr four and ouedialf miles long by half ft
mlle te ft mile bread, and eighty feet dcep.
There are te be three lines of pipe, each
sixty eight miles long, with filtering beds
nnd6gceudary reservoirs, nnd the cost of
the aqueduct alone is estimated at $13,
000,000. New Yerk Sun.
buiiuimuliulKt'i (ioeil Fortune,
The danger of somnambulism Is wcl?
known. A writer in The Century tells of
a picce of geed fertune coming from the
habit. A j enng lady, troubled and anx
ious about a prize for which slie was te
compete, involving the writing of un
essay, arose from her bed in sleep and
wrete n paper upon a subject upon whlc.
bhe had net intended te write whejv
nwake, and this essay secured for her the
prizu Chicago Herald.
The T.-iwr'a Dclujn.
Quibble Aw, Grotius, hew are you
getting en witli the case of Ven Abbatelr,
who chopped his wlfe's head off?
Coke Poorly, poeily! I hud finished ar
guing the seventh appeal jtsterday when
wbenUlonews i cached rap that he had
died a natural death In jail. It's useless
for legal talent te contend against the oc ec
ceutric forces of natuic Llfe.
The Dlnucrtcuble Slile.
"Don't you find the llfe of a tramp
very disagreeable?" asked the farmer
wife
"OH no," rejoined the wanderer; "It
ain't hair be iliMigiceablu as the people I
meet I di n t mind the 1'ft- se much as I
du the d '- mid tlie iuii.j;i I git te eat."
Harper Bazar
V
Fk
i "3T1U. lWJt UK 1
S Y
A SKY SCRAPER.
The Eiffel Tower mml XVhdt Recently
UappcncU Tliere.
The Parisian journals have lately had
many references te the great tower being
built by M. Eiffel, which Is Intended te
be the loftiest of the kind In the world,
and already affords a splendid blrd's-cye
view of all Paris and the surrounding
country. On a recent occasion representa
tives of all the Parisliu papers, by Invite
Hen of M. Eiffel, accompanied him te the
highest finished platform, 887 feet beve
the ground, and after dining there they
climbed, each as far as he dared, towards
the summit.
4221
CMMDIKO TUE TOWEH.
The first stage Is up an ordinary stalr stalr
case entirely enclosed In ene of the pillars,
fur 300 steps te n resting place villi open
windows, where there Is room for COO jwjr jwjr
pens. Then the real tell of the ascent
begins. A spiral stairway rises 300 steps
further, the stairway turning se rapidly
around a small pillar that light headed
peeple nre seriously affected; but the
guard rail Is firm and well anchored, and
there Is no danger. And there most peo
ple step, as the remainder of the ascent
nt present Is by n bare ladder for forty
eight feet, anil the vlew from the lower
platform Is Cne enough for most people.
But of ceurse the journalists could net
afford te step there; and 60 the whole
gang, from the veuerable Hebrard and
Sarcey te the youngest nnd most rccklesd
reporter, climbed te the werkingmen'rf
platform, where they wcre delighted with
the magnificent vlew.
It is noted as an interesting fact that,
despite the heated controversies of these
times, the novelty brought together n
larger number of journalists, representing
organs of nearly all opinions, than any
event for many months. A bunded and
twenty persons joined in the banquet, and
besides M. Eiffel and a few engineers, all
were journalists. The banquet was served
en the 378 feet level, below the highest
point they reached; speeches wcre made,
of course, and the whele was a re.mark
ably lively mld-alr occasion. Then the
entlre group wcre photographed In fine
detail, qulte en achievement in that line,
as the platform Is but a fraction ever 25
feet square
HRONEK'S BOMBS.
They Are lugrnlmuly Constructed, ami Are
Ilrre Dcdcrlheil.
Here is a cut of ene of the bombs said
te have been in the possession of Hrenck,
ene of the men lately orrested in Chicago
charged with n conspiracy te treat that
city te another dese of dynamite Its
structure will be understood by the
follewing:
VTVlu
ItllOXEK 8 EOMD.
Ne. 1 is the bomb ready ftr use. It li
covered with paper, pasted te the metal,
and admirably Adapted te conceal the do de
sign. A slight pressure en the top will
break the paper and reveal a fuse. This
is shown in Ne. 2. The fuse Is se short
that a man would only have time te light
it anil threw the bomb before it would
explode. Ne. 3 is a cress section, and
shows the bomb's Interior arrangement.
The outer covering is of zinc, five Inches
long and three iu diameter. The inner
cylinder is filled with dynamite, "B." A
circular pleee of zlne Is cut te fit closely
inslde the large cylinder, and In its center
is a hole, for the admission of the fuse.
On the under side of this zlne is soldered
n small copper cylinder about an inch
in length with a closed end. This Is
filled with fulminating powder, "C," and
inserted In the Jdynamite In the smaller
cylinder. The space between the tw"e
cylinders, "C," is filled with missilcs.which
consisted In this case of broken bits of
crockery, nails, pieces of iron ero aud
scraps of lead plpe.
When the fuse Is lighted It explodes
the fulminating powder, which explodes
the dynamite, ecaiteriug the' missiles.
The Writer'.. Iially TaL.
The averace writer of talcs or- novels
regards from 1, COO te 2,000 words a day
as a sufficient day's work, although there
is great difference between writers. An An
teony Trollepo Bet himself n. stent, some semo seme
times 1,000, sometimes 1,500 words a day,
and always did it Thackeray, en the
ether hand, sometimes had prodigious
bursts of energy, in which he accom
plished the writing of many pages lu his
best manner, and w ith scarcely un inter inter
lineateon, and then again he would write
scarcely a dozen lines In a day, and these
wcre full zigzags and black lines and cor
rections. New YericEmihicJiiin.
Mftlllll-U'S feeIllllTH' Meuummt.
Capt. Charles II. Tcnncy, a wealthy
citizen of Mcthuen, Mass., has given a
monument te the tevvn te the Union eeI-
dier.s who fell in
the late civil war.
He submitted n
preposition te
that effect te the
citizens, his offer
was accepted. The
monument has
been erected and
dedicated with
imposing ceremo
nies. The shaft Is
of granite, IW feet
4 Inches from the
base te the ten
On the east tiue
is inscribed, "Te
the Soldiers and
Sailors Who
Fought In Dofcnse
tiii: mencmext.
of the Union," and en the opposite side,
"Presented by O. II. Tewney." On the
north and south sides are liens cut iu the
grauite ene In au attitude of anger, the
ether in repese. Under the former is
"lfcOl," and under the latter "1M5." At
the top is a ball of Quincy granite, en
which is a brass eagle The grounds
about the monument are beautifully laid
out.
.Ne eed of II.
A correspondent, reminded by a story of
n queer use of words down en Cape Ced,
tells this:
"When Bosten and I were young I re
member meeting an honest, sincere but
illiberally educated member of our legis
lature from a eulet part of Cape Ced. who.
hearing of the need for organizing the
I militia, said he thought 'drums and fifes
wcre enough without the expense of
jglrta' 'era erglna.' "Bosten Transcript.
ini
32fiG.- Mil
?' Llll
& ;iH ? 1 if rail
;i "i -J J i' -Z
LIGHT LITERATURE.
EFFECTS OF THE CONTINUED CON
SUMPTION OF TRASHY STORIES.
A Wuhlnuten Ilrpnrtrr l'rlfi Inte th
the Secret nt the Clie Heek Trade,
The Nevel Heading linlill nml 1U He
ulU Chrnp Libraries.
Persons very fend of reading, but wUh
llttle spare tluie te Indulge their taste, who
Tlslt a narrow shop near oho of the de
partments, nre apt te ceme awy"wllUJa
pevere attack of the blues. The shelves,
counters, and even the tloer of the shop
are check full of pretty nearly all the wis
dem of the ancients and wit of the mod
erns, done up In elegant but handily
pocketable paper bound packages, which
sell at from ten te twenty cents each. The
shop, la fact, Is a sort of headquarters for
the cheap libraries new se numerous, and
which are said te be doing great dauiage
te the mero pretentious branches of the
book trade.
Hore, for $5, a careful pcrseu can pur
chase a library mero extensive and better
than was ever owned by many n man
whom the world calls great and wise.
History, biography, jxx'try, philosophy,
science, llteraturu and romance are min
gled In bewildering confusion and pro
fusion. A glance at the titles of the
famous works piled en shelf and counter
fills ene with despair of ever being able te
read them all, se numerous ere they; and
yet they are se cheap that a person with
thp reading habit feels ashauicd net te
buy an armful aud rush off te his den te
devour them at ence.
"We have several customer.s who read
two and three lx56ks ft day," the proprie
tor said te an inqulsltive icperter. "One
man In particular used te ceme in regu
larly every ether or third day and carry
off each time from six te eight volumes.
He didn't appear particular about what
he read, but took them just as they came.
He kept It up week nt ter week, tee. He
had a place iu the Interior department,
but was discharged net long age,"
The propleter didn't intimate that there
was any connection between the man's
reading habits and the less of his position,
but it struck the reporter that there
might be.
A HOOK A DAY.
"There are plenty of peeple who aver-
age a book a day, month In and month
out," the proprietor continued. "These
peeple are mostly novel readers, of ceurse.
It gets te be a passion with thorn, like
anything else, and they glve all their
spare time te it. If they eui't get held
of a new story as seen as they Iiave fin
ished the old ene they don't knew what
te de with themselves and are mlscrable
llke a tippler whose rations have been
cut off or n merphine cater who can't get
the drug."
"De you netice much difference In the
class of stories preferred by men and wo
men?" the reporter asked.
"Ne, I can t say that 1 de. The women
don't seem te be especially fend of leve
stories. In fact, seme women who ceme
here won't read leve stories or novels
written by women. They prefer the do de do
tectlvo stories and mysteries of Du Bels-
Sebey and Garberlnu and Zela's highly
avered stuff. G. W. M. Reynolds' sen
sational romances used te have n big sail),
but theyateu't iu us much demand as
they were."
"Haven't the cheap libraries hurt the
sensational story papers u great deal?" the
repeiter inquired.
"Well, net as much as I thought they
wcre going te at first." the gentleman
Bald. "I expected the story papers would
be entirely driven out of the field by the
cheap libraries, but I hardly think their
sales have fallen as much as 25 pur cent.
The papers have te keep booming Uieiik
selves all the time, though, or they lese
ground badly. They arefe't the bonanzas
thoyusedtebo. The nowsdealerswouldu't
be very sorry If the story papers were
driven out of the field altogether. The
margin of profit en them Is very small,
and the worst of it is the peeple who buy
them are of the 'charge-it nud-I'll-pay-yeu
ncxt-tline' class. New, If they fail
te pay ence It knocks the profit off il geed
many papers."
"The peeple who read the story papers,
then, are of a different class from these
who buy the cheap library novels?"
falsi: and foolish idi:as.
"Yes, as a rule, they are. The peeple
whe'read thcse novels and rerial stories
get falsp and foolish ideas of llfe, This
is especially true of the "confirmed sjery
faper readprtt. They are the wersl of all.
can tell quo of iheud almost as quickly
as 1 set eyes en hcrr-fer the story paper
readers anTge'iierally' women. They have
e. would be grand and romantic air about
them, use big words' and theatrical ex
pressions, and try td imitate generally In
their manner the highly wrought charac
ters they read about la the serials. Girls
brought up from the time they are fifteen
or sixteen en this sort of reading aren't
satisfied with a man unless he Is like the
heroes of their stories, and they are apt
te wait a geed while before they find ene
who seems te premise te ceme te what
they call their ideal.' And then, if they
de getjnarried, In nlnety-niue cases out
of d'liundred, they seen discover that the
premises were all false; that theyhavcu'
married their here nt all, hut only an
ordinary, common place man, with net
enough of the story paper 'Ideal' te him
te supply a paiagraph In ene of the sloppy
bcrials.
"Thcse peeple with the story paper
habit," the speaker continued, "seem
hardly able te control their Impatience
from week te week for the succeeding in
stallments of the remances. Many of
thorn make a practlc6 of coming here atieut
the time tney Knew tne papers arrive ami
waiting until they can get them; aud If
they should lianpcnte bf late, and all the
papers are sold out when they tsei here,
then there is a row."
"Hew many of the cheap libraries are
there new iu existcnceV" the reporter
asked.
"Oh, probably fifty all told," the dealer
answered, "and new ones are starting up
every week. The trade has get te be
something immense. Many of the libra
ries are published Irregularly, sending out
a volutne ence or twice a month. There
are about a dozen which ceme out regu
larly from ene te three times a week. A
ceuple of the leading ones for a while
published ft number every day, but they
seemed te have exhausted the supply of
uncepyrighted and foreign novels and
ether available books, and new tend out
three numbers a week.
"We have an arrangement which makes
the cheap libraries cheaper still," the
sptaker continued, "We buy back boekd
which are net damsged in reading nt half
price, se that even people who nod eight
or ten books a week are In no danger of
bankrupting themselves by Indulging In
this form of dissipation. It isn't an ex ex
jkjusIve vice newtdays, at leabt In its Im
mediate consequences." Washington
Star.
A Fourth of July Talc.
U was Fourth of July. He had been
Inhaling ft geed deal of powder smeke,
Ke he said. It was net liquor; he said
the fumes of the firecrackers had geno te
his head They had net bereft him of
reason. IIe knew he had a wlfe and fun
Ily. When a man gets te his fullest oo eo oe
pacity of Inebriation, when he has r r
getten where he lives, who Is with lici,
whether it is Tuesday or 8tnrday, ';
what his name Is, he will still remeiaVr
that his wife has te be reckoned w li.
He knew that thcre was treuble ahtid,
and he was thinking of ull sorts of nutvr
ex'cuscs for his condition as he vvanaored
te and fro looking fvr a hack te take hua
ltome. X last he came across a dingy
looking macblne standing In solitary dig
nity at the corner of a qulet street. He
was net se far geno that he could net di
rect the driver where te take him. It
was seme way out In the suburbs. The
hack dreve along, and us he bumped from
back te front In the usual erratie way ene
does In a hack, he triud hard te make up
his mind what he would say . his wlfa
when hu get home
There came a very lively bntnb that put
an end te his musing, for when he came
down he found the bottom had fallen out
of the hark and the seat had ceme te
pieces se he could only gre.sp held of be
Un ilenru nd run wlui. UuLuimliin. &A
yelled at the driver, bnt"the"drIvcr was
deaf, and for half a mjle he had te mero
as fast as his legs would go. IIe did net
need any excttse when he get home. II
was sober; se terribly sober that he had
forgotten he had had anything te drink at
all. He was mad well, mad la n mild
word but he was knocked speechless
when the hackman.nftcr looking earnestly
Inte the hack, Instead of offering en
liumble apology, turned en hlm and fold;
"Say, what lu thunder have jeu doue
wilh the bottom of my hackl"
And whenever Ids wlfe wants anything
slie asks him In the blandest tene:
"Jehn, what did you de with the bot
tom of that hackl"--San Francisce Chron
icle "Undertones."
Yerk In 31 lilitimnier,
At a certain period of the year New
Yerk always reminds me of a baker's
even, with the fires well fed. This porled
Is new about upon us. There has been
enough sunlight during thu past ceuple
of weeks te get the town well heated,
and it will net cool again until the season
changes. It will net be much hotter,-for
the sufficient reason that It cannot be.
Only anexceptleually torrid sun can add te
the enervating heat that Is radiated bv
miles of heiircs, wliose sunny walls
scorch the hand, and of streets whose
pavements exhale the calorle of furnace
doers. By day the town sends up a shim
mer of heat Inte the nlr. After dark It
still retains Its suffocating temperature.
Every breeze that blows through the
streets Is wilted out of all freshness In Us
passage, and In order te get a breath that
Is uet stale, you have te climb upon your
reef, and jeu are lu I tick If the reef 'is a
high one.
The parks by day aud night nre llke
tropical jungle. Even in Central park
veti sunnier as If In the calendarluui of a
Turkish bath, for whatever air does
wander around Its winding ways Is
exhausted by Its Journey through the
city. The experienced Jew Yerker who
stays in town for the summer continues
te exist by keeping Indoors as much ns
possible, alleviating the temperature with
closed biiuds and plenty of ice water. I
have been In tropical cities iu midsummer,
where the heat was net as great or oppres
sive as it is at the same season here. Al
fred Trumble In Pittsburg Bulletin.
Nut a Humane Hltle.
It was premised for the new Ixsbcl
(French) repeating rllle that It was
humane, cither killing outright or disa
bling, but net terturingw ith the frightful
wounds made by slngle fircrs of large cali
ber, nnd Indeed, be for its known, the
magazlue giiHuis well. Rcccut experi
ments, hew (Br, have shown (hat (he 8
millimeter Lebcl magazlne guif Is no mero
humane than that of 11 mtlllmetcr caliber.
The oxperiments were ee'iiducled by
Capt. Jarlcet, his men firing Inte dead
bodies and at llve animals at distances of
COO, -100, COO, 1,000, 1,-100, 1.000 and 2,000
meters, and the result," a j summed up by
Dr. Delonu'e, are that the orifice made by
the entrance of the eight mllllmoter ball
is smaller than that of Its gelns out, the
same varying from four te six mllllmo mllllme
ters, according te the velocity of the bul
lets the power of the new steel projeo prejeo projee
tllo being greater than that of Its prodo predo prode
cessor, the bones offering less resistance,
and there being consequently less deflec
tion of the bullets. The hepe that the
bones' would have a "clear" fracture, with
llttle of the splintering which Is te pain
ful, has net been realized. On the con
trary, the bone Is tern "shivered" would
perhaps mero nearly express what Dr.
pelorme says In the nrtlcle he writes en
"Ohlrurgle de Guerre." And yet he says
thjt'the effects of tlfe new ride, as used
at present, are trifllupr compared te what
they will be when the new explosives,
melinite, roburite, etc , are used. Scien
tific American.
lliu l.uiipimi;e of tfruMhepprrfl.
These grasshoppers, as If nware that
their beauty resided in their wings, rlse
iu the air te sing. The nolse Is made by
rubbing the upper edge of the true wings
against the under surface of the wing
covers. I have often watched them while
lu this acriul position, und wondered If
the song was always u leve call. If be
havior means auj thing among grasshop
pers, they have at times, especially Inte
in Iho season, ether business aslde from
leve making. Many times I have ob
served ene of thcse creatures mount up
n few feet aliove the ground, calling, cult
lug, until sometimes half ft dozen or
mero would cougrcgate beneath him,
when he would drop down In thelr midst
and touch the head of each us If consult
lug alieut some grnve matter; thru the
llttle fleck would dlsperse and the wuhI
clun, or orator, or whatever he was,
would go te another place aud call another
crowd, nnd after the harangue he would
again ulighl nml communtcate with each
individual. As fur as I could see there
was no leve making connected with this
affair.
ICnlomeloglsts who have made the
brains of lusicts a study tell us that the
orthepteru, especially the grasshopper
have a geed development of brain, but net
equal te the ants, or te the sudul bees
and wasps.
Anether class of grassheppcis remain
en the ground te play. Thcse nre the
violinists among the musicians; they use
their hiud legs for bows, which they draw
across strings situated In the whiff covers.
The Recky nieuntulu locust (Coleptcniis
spretus) belongs te this class. And here
la an Instance where an insect ceases te
be Insignificant and becomes a great and
mighty lower iu the luiul, compelling the
government te supply men and means te
try und thwart the vast armies that sweep
ever sections of the west, devouring all
vegetation before them. Mary Treat Iu
the Chautuuquau.
'llie IlrllgliU of hummer.
Summer la the Bcasen of growth und
physical prosperity for everything, un
Imato or Inanimate, except man in the
four season climates, aud even thcre aome
exception)! prove what the rule might be.
The fanner sweats freelv while hoeing In
his cornfield, but, with Ills straw hat, Milt
of light Jeans and bare feet he fecit the
same grateful exhilaration as the veg
ctatlng sheets which spring up greenly
about hlm. The pores of his sltlii ure
open for every passing brcee, and the
wet drops which soak Inte ids light
clothing are net an expcuie account upon
his physical bank.
A similar regulation of clothing prevails
in het climates. The Hindoe who works
all duy in the rlce fields Is net subject te
sunstrokes. Australians, Cubans anil
Mexicans llveiaslly during six months of
het weather, because they knew hew te
adapt themselves te cllmatte conditions
as fatal as pestilences In the cities of this
part of the glebo during seme weeks of
the summer The UrtOKS, iu the days
when Athtus was great, when Pericles or
A'ciblades ruled aud Secrates. Plate. Zcne
or Pythagoras wcre living thinkers, did
net suffer from heat In their robes of
snowy linen. And the Ilemans of the
heroic age, w hen Virgil saDg, Cicere talked
aud C'ttsar led armies te victory, thought
summer a delightful season of happiness
and comfort.
The same possibilities exist for men. of
today. If they will only clethe themsclvc't
sensibly and diet reasonably. New l'erk
Press.
VVuklnc from SUen.
The author of "On Jllue Water" gives
seme curious observations npen the man
ner in which we rocevcr possession e.
our senses whenever we are awakened.
He thinks that it is the rjnse w hich If
most violently assailed that Is first te
wake up. He says:
"1 knew u.q p)ice where a man has f,e
many opportunities for observing the
phenomena attending the awakening from
sleep as en bearl shjp, where half the
jjcople are awakened from se" ml sleep at
least three times a day.
"Often the bright light of my cabin
lamp, jnst lighted, has been visible te me
eome seconds bofero I could hear or un
derstand that I was being called te get
up. I have often called a man, and re
celved an answer which led me te bellove
that he was wide awake, though he was
unconscious of having auswered at all.
Yen may even held a long and aulmatcd
conversation with some men at eight bells
without wekeig them up," Youth's Com-SUileu,
i
m r BBBM 'V 'bOVBBbI
bbbbbbbLV .AbL. bbbLT JbbbbbbbI
An Important Announcement
Abrml nix mtflt ten. whlln it tm.inM, I
udilrnlr atiamrd wtlitt rtcruclttlei
paJnft In my trtU knres alia tiftnrt. KiHtn.
inn auacKinni i
took mr 10 tinmnllatfir.
nml In tire or thrre 1ji inr Jelntu wrra
wellen te filmrat inuhl thrlr natural lif,
anil alnp iraa drlf'ri from mr. AricraulTrr.
Iiii Ih mom aicrtirlatln pnln for antra-,
uilng llnlmrnti anitTarleua ethr rrmedlM,
a fllem! rlui.jinplhlM If Un mjr bcllllma
condition. MM te me I
"Wbr don't you irrlBwlrraSpoflrle and
tis It. I mil auaranlra a euro, and It II doc
tint Iha ra.lllnm ahftll cvit vnil nulhlnff.
1 at oem arcurnt the H. 8. B., ami after I
iiting ik ma nrt nx,uaii nqujriniKni ,ni
rtfrt.hlea alcpn. In a hm
tantrum!. in fbrrawrcka I could alt ud anil
in n
k 1 frit areatlr
nalh. alKiut the room, and attar u.lna alx
a
tcllltIwa4 out and Alla te go te tiuatnta.
Hlncathen 1 ltava branrcmilatlrat my peat
of dutr.atut atand en my fart from ulna In
Ian henra a day, and am entirely f rta f rem
I'aln, llirftM are the plain and almple facta
nmycair.nnd I will cheerfully an.nrrall
lnqulrlea rclatlre thereto, either In peraeu ur
tymall. TneHaa lUamixic.
. It W. lSth itreet. New Yerk Cltr.
Nunntj , Trsi. I hv warded n(T a aa
Tere attack of rheunt ntlani ly a timely reaert
tn Hurlfia HiteclQe. In all caaea where a per
manent relief Is eon tit tula medicine com.
mendattirlf for n eenaUtuilnnal Irea. -enl
that tlioremthly eradlcatia I. icda of UU
eaaa tiuui the avtiem.
. Iter. IV. I'. IUnnne, D. D.
Nr.tr VetiK, III Tilt Ay. After apendlnir
iM te Ih, rtlleted of Illoed I'olnen Mltheilt
any benefit, a lew !ttlc!Ot Bwlft'aBieclitd
worked a iwrfect cms. C I'OKtta.
Vlriiu. Oi.-Mr llttla Rlrl, aed alt, ami
boy, aged 'four year, had airerula In thn
wprit ejtRTnvated ahae. They v. era puny
and alcklr. Today Iher nre healthy and ru
tin t, all the ttoullet taking H. H. B.
Jeb T. tKLMKR.
Lint LAkk, SCMTrn Ce., Fu.-Your a 8.
R haa preveil a wonderful euccms In my
ra.e. The cancer oil my face, no doubt,
would haie eoen hurried me te my grave. I
de think Hla uendertul, nnd ha unequal.
11. 11, limn, 1'eatmatter.
Wace, TKXU, May . I3S3.
a H. Ce, Atlinta, 1. i
Orntlcmen-Kiiewinu that ynii nrrreclaM
voluntary testimonial, we lake tdeaaure In
atatlOK tnat eue of our lady cu.leiiieta Itaa
fetialned her health by the ua of four large
eittea of j our Krrat remedy, after having;
beenanlntalMferaeteralyrara. llertreublu
waaeiirenieiicuiiii
eullar In htr 1.1. V
waa eitreme debility, canted by a dlieaae ie
it ii i
lied
LlA Ce.. Druk'Cl.ta.
Three ixta mailed irta uu
All druittata aril K. a 8.
FliucAuea,
Tim Hitirr Brrcirra Ce ,
l tahitii, Aiianinita.
huw Yurk,;t4 Hreednay.
HV.Vttt AMI) LlUVniiH
UK OWN illtANI).
SPECIAL.
"OUR OWN BRAND"
run SALIC 11 V
H. E. SLAYMAKER,
Ne. 20 Enat Klnu Btroet,
LANUAIITKll, l'A.
MAUIllNKltr.
pKNTHAIj MAOH1N15 WOKKH.
Central Machine Works,
W. V. UUJIMINliS, l'roprkter,
NOH. lel A 130 NOKT1I OHHIHITANHT.
LAIfOASTSH, l'A.
KNUINKH, 1IDILHKH, MACUINKUV,
HlIAri'lNOS, I'ULI.KYa, HANfJKltS, AO.
IKON AND JIltAUH CAHl'INOM,
WOOU AND SltTAL l'ATTKUNB nf lkt
Uuallty.
I LarKeatund llestBtecU In Lunc later of Ceal
Ireti una Mulleulilii KlttlUHS, llnua una Iren
Valves ana Cocks, Mteum llutiut'it, Bututy
Valvea, 1 ry Cot k, Water UuiiKie, Oat Valves,
Lulitlcittera, una ttiiiuii J ik1 lu uniiurul.
arltupatilni pioiiiptlydeno. (fcena-hsna
KiiKlnea, Jlelluia una Muulilnury Houk til ana
B"' ' GOOUWOltK.
IIKAHONAIII.K U11A1U1KH. rilOMl'rNEbS,
arNetOt!)iuilOtu Aaaicas.
ac2-tia
J1AMJ) UK II VI UU FU.
15
ANDANNA lIANOKKKOHIKfH.
-UKT YOUll-
Bandanna HandkercWefs
3, 5 and 10 Cents,
-AT-
ERISMAN'S,
NU. 42 iVJiS'J KIXU til.
UfNvxl Ituet U) Hbylei'a l'lnileKruiiU Oul
li ty
MVUsarvHHiaiiu-M uuvve.
e
AL.L ANil HKlt
TUB
ROCHESTER LAMP
sutyCundln-LtKbli J'-i'ttts tteui all.
AVuother Uitel CUKAl 4iI,Uliei rnrHaa an
Olistnvtu'
THIS " PHTlKKOTiOIa "
kteXAL MOULIJINI. A UU1I1IEU CU0111UM
WEATHERSTRIP
jseaW them all.trbls strip outwears all etben ,
Keeps eul me ceiu. euip niivtuii; ui winimwr,
Xxclude Uie duHl. 11 oep out snow und mlii
Anyone can apply 11110 wuste or am maae
In appiyinK iu tin ee mien any'
where no
teles te bem, ready ler u. It will uet dpllt,
arp or shrink a cusMen strip la the most
rurtbCt. At the Htrve, Heater and !Ui,
Jehn P. Sehaum & Sens
24 SOOTH QDSKN ST.,
NOTIOK TO TKKHl'AHHKliy Nl
UUNMK11S. All persona are h rub j te.,
hidden te trespass en any et the lands el tm
Cornwall and Speedwell ertau sin lbaniuei
l.nnf&atnr rytnnllr h. whnlhur tncKSOl 01 Unit)
ciwea, enter ler tbe purpose of stuwliiis 01
asblne. as the law will te rltiaiy eulote
arainat. all trnanajuliu' ou ssld b.ntja 'il ttK en
ui euiviiii ui
deslarnedsftbr this nuilcv.
ara" WM. COLMAN th.r.HlA.f,
U, fEKOV ALDth
IILW, O.rUKKMAN.
,ierueyt fcr u.n.Ueiiuu'k usir
e
WW
lri'.'i.
aiaf
bbbVM "Jbbb!
bbbbU1 i al
m ' :
BBsN ?
r4ffil ,
KKTBA.IItd
''HIbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
-?WBbbbVbb
TRA VKhHH& OVID.
jDKADINO & COLUMBIA K. B.
Arratigftnent of
fafiemrer
Train a en, aa
alter, BUMDAY
, MAT 13,188,
MOBTUWARD.
JL.H.
Lrava
Snarryvllle
In Street, Lane,
Lancnatesr.,,. ,,
Ctalckleit
Marietta Junction.
Ceutnbla ....,,,
Arrive at
Heading
A. at.
9 SB
113S
12 43
II SO
12M
1230
A.M.
2. M
'ift
M
I'M
s as
4.M
lt
P. .
,... fl.40
7.40
.. 730
.. 7M
.. 790
A. at.
tM
SOUTH VTA KD.
.. "We .
A.K.
11.80
r. v.
las
r.at.
net
9.1Q
927
9 70
9 80
10.20
Columbia i..l"ll'
I alienator '
Kin Street, '.anc .'
cjuarryvllle
204
2.00
l.U
aLMlTMS
3J
ata
IT,
BUNDAT.
Leave
Qttiirryvllleat 7.10
m.
nin ir mi
trppt. Iann. . it fl fM m ....
Arrtra at '"" "u" "0e P- "
Kainir. ie ie a. m, ana M p. m.
Leave;
llenaiiiit, at 7 20 a. tu ana I p. tn.
Arrive at
WSSgffik atn'p " A" ' M
ilo,Xt.ewnana W MfflS
ii-CeI"",.l,lft' wllh trains te ana from Tork
were. r UeUJ,,u"'-. rreUeiiciT SSa bSS
mm.cuiXe;.JuncUen '" t" teajil
nAtMauheiIuwtm trains te ana I rem It.
Atlancatflr Junotlen. with Mua ...
" WILoeN Hupertnumaent.
LWA081"" JIMT
Aimngeinetit nt 1'aaeeriRer Tralna
atter, bundat, Mat 18, lew.
en, aafl
, NOttTHWAUU.
anflay.
4f(VSl A U
IJrarryvllle, '
KlnKHtnit,Laue.. 7.1)0
jHrieiiHUr 707
Jlnnliuliu 7jj
Cornwall 759
. Arrive at
Lebaneu.... M
SUUXUVVAUD.
Iave a w.
L liunetl 7
Cnniwiill 7jT
Manhelm , 7.B8
Lancaaler. jar
Arrtvn 11 1
r. at.
ns
12 11
1.18
146
r.at
a.bi r.M,
SIR
KM
8 0S
6.U?
S.I3
S.45
9.17
8S)I
8.18
ew
1.53 7.10
92
A N.
8,M
r at.
12, SO
1243
l.U
14S
r.at
7im
1M
8 10
7.
8 IS
8 42
4.09
Ml
8.40
9.M
Klnnatreut, l4inc.8S8
A. M. WIl.tlllN. Hunt
l.U B.60,
9 20
,HMail5riU8L,?',."WV.11'. O. UAUreafl.
h. H.Nisrr, 8upt d. 11, it.
jM uciUDULK.-ln circct lrera June 11,
Tintn lkavb LAtiuASTia ana leave and ar ar
rtve at I'liilaaelphla n fellows t
Leavn
Lqbtm
WKSTWAllll.
ruclOa Kzpreaet
W( Kxprtiat)
svny l'aasenRiirt
Mull trntnvliiMt. Jevl
me 2 Mall Trali,....!
Mngaru Kxpreaa ....
Iliinevtir Acceui
Kaat Llnr
rittdnrlek Aeceui....
I unriiatHr Aceetn.,,.
lliirrlehurK Accem...
Celutiibla Aocetn..,.
llurrlslJiirKKxpniatl
Wustern azpteait .
KA8TWAUI).
I'lilla. Kxprestt
ut line)
lliinlaburg ttxpreani
I iincaater Aceem...,
t'elumlila Aceetn..,,
Allntitle rxpresai.,,
fiiuheni Kxuruan....
i'Mlaaelphla.
Laneaatar,
map, in,
4 30a. Ul.
:!0a. m.
7.(10 a. m.
iiaii rn,
8:3a. m.
8:10 a. aa,
9 81a, m.
ess a- m.
s. te a. m.
9Asa.s.
ffl p. m.
2:10 p. m,
2:8., p, m.
8:30 p, m.
7:40 p, m.
7:90 D. m.
via Columbia
7: tea. m.
via Columbia
ll.'tua. tn
via Columbia
via ml joy.
;in p.m.
4:10 p. m.
l.Wp, m.
9:00 p. in.
Leave
Luncaatsr.
Siiei, m.
see a. m.
8:10a. m.
S.SVa. 111.
9 ei a. ru .
11:10 a. tn.
12.01 p.m.
i.esp in.
8.1 Oil. 111.
4:45 p, 111,
ll'l.sn. in.
11:10 p.m.
AMn at
I'blla,
4:4V a, nu
8,'4 a. m.
10:20 a, m.
vialtiJey
uivia. an.
liZip.Ba.
3:15 p.m.
8.00 p. BB
5:5 p. Bat
8:nep.m.
9:4V n m.
I'lillaOelphlu Acceui.
iiiiuiiy bi 1111 ,
1 11 y Kxureatj
"Mrrtahitrw A from
J tie Luucuaur AetoiimieilNiiou leaves alar
"l'lwtH:iep.w.i ana arrives at Lancaster
at 9:3a p. in.;
Tlie Marietta Accommodation leare Colum
bia ut 0:10 a. in ana rtianlies Mailettav at AM,
Alse luuviiainluu bin atll.'lSa. 10., anflftUp.
m., reticlilng Mailettu at 12:et ana 2.58. Leava
alutluttu ul a.el p. in , ana arrives at Cnlambl
a. .11 1 also, lvavvs at b.M ami urrtves at BM
'J'baierk AroOmineaallon leaves Marietta
ut7:ie ana arrives at Lancsstnrat , eom eem eom
nielliiij wllh HarrUburic Kxpress at 8:10a. m.
Urn freOeilck AecoinmeOtiUoa, west, eon
n; clinic at Lancaater mlth rat Una, wast, '
at 2:10 11. in , -win run tnreugh te rreasrlek.
'I'lin rrederlck Accommodation, east, laavea
Celuinlila at 12:25 ana reaches LaneasUrat
12. VI p. in,
linrrtHiiurir Accommodation, west. cennaat
at Columbia (or Yerk.
Hanover Aoeomuioaatlon, east, learesCel.
umbla at 4:10 p. in. Arrives atLanetatarat
4.K5 p. m.. eennuetlna- wltb Day express.
Hanover AoceinuitHlatlon. wsat, oeoneottoar
at Luncaatiir with MsRara Kxpreas at 9-Mm,
111., will tun UireuKh te Hanover, dally, x
tiHitHiinday j also coaneets at Columbia for
rate llurbjr.
ran Mne, west, an Dunaay. when dims,
will atop ut UownliiKtewn. Coateavlllo,
rurkestjurg, lit. Jey, KlIzAbethtewn ana Mid'
tlie only trains wbleb rnu dally. On 8nn
Ouy tbe Mall train west runs by way of Cel-
J U. Wt)OU, Uoneral rsasenver AseaU
CHA9. K. l'Utifl. ueneral Manager.
CAKHlAUWi,
C5TANOAKD WORIT.
,3
EDW. EDGERLEY
CAKUUUK I1UILDEB,
MO!, 40, 44, 4), 45 MAliKKT (ITltKKT, K4WT at
1'osteltlce, Lancaater. I'a,
1 have In Btoea ana'Uttlia te Order Every
Vurlutyel tlie lollewInK styles 1 Coupe, Hoc Hec
fli.B, Cabrliiluts, CurrtuKvs, vlotetlaa, Buslnaaa
WoKens, "T" Carts, McCull Wagons. Burrtea,
Miirket Waiteiis, I'bmtens, Kxpreaa Wagerufc
n,Ull. I,.t SI...I a .aa a " aiav
I tli te bulla correctly ny style e( CantnM
dcslriid. TbeUuallty.Btyfeana rtnlshni my
work makes It decidedly tbe Cheapest t VA
market,
SrWKHAVKl'HI lIKSTAMUCIIKArMT
UAUT1NTIIK MAUKKT.
WIIATIH YOUK UUIKF DKLIUUTT
ir IT UK I'LKASUUK IttDIMO,
J. H.
NORBECK,
tHuccesser te Nerbeck Jfc Mlley),
l'roptluter of the
Kcli&Me Yellow Freit Ceich
Old
Werli,
cuuNKii ur
DliCK ANUVINKHTUKKT8, Lancaater, Vt.
Is fully prepared te accomuiedatn yen wltb
rtUDleus, rutnlly Currluites, Uuggles, ste ,
efthu t ulest Iiedlitni and Vurlety of Springs
and HtyliiM, ana which for Cem tort, I'lenauns
lcuuiy, rinlshana superleilty e( Vorkman Verkman
thlp titunul be excelled, ellber In tbeelty or
fiuiuly et Luncuster, and as te l'rleea, oompa eompa oempa
tlttou is dellud.
nuil OAUiH at Hpeclut HarKilns. De net
buy iiUowlmre till you have aeen Nerbeck'
biuckuud Make. My own make always n
tulusiuy wiirtl
it 11 be (or uutlness Internsts.then and there
you will Ond llualiitss mid Market rvngenr,
aieCall nnd Dayton Hickory Wasens, etc,
which will tervoyeur purpose, and can new
be hud at frlces and Turuis te suit your
poekut-beoka.
Alse. Mccenfl-haud Werk of every desertp
lien rebuilt as Ktied as new.
Call and mm the Large Bleck.
UupulrliiK, with caru and promptness, still a
peel illy.
rU-3mdSw
O li. MAKTIN tt CO,,
VVhelt'SHlnanil Ketall Unalerslnall kinds
LiUMiiKK AM) UOAU
aw Yauu-Ne. 421 North Water and Ke. 410
North 1'rtnte Htnita. I Jincaater. I'a nMyd
TJAUMOAHDNKK'H UOSCFAHT,
GOAL DEALERS.
Onoa:-Ne. 129 Niui guecuStrMt, Bad Mew
K4 North lrlnce street, ,
yABDa:-Nerth rnnce street, near manUg
a 2u Id LAHOASTaUa, TA
youeKr
llBSrANDCHKAPKST
COAL
AT Blll'LUYKa'S, NO. n kastking.ne.
tUSMUUTlIl'VlNUai. ,
Jy2l,2l,2fl,,31a2,td
L
bM libit, UOAXix.
LUMBER, C0IL
-AKU-
ROOFING SLATE.
O. SENER & SONS,
I'UINOK AND WALNUT BT3.,
SU Ccwl et the Ileal Quality at the Lewest
Trices. Buy new, us It may be higher,
JU30 ltd T
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