Koyul inukcb the tood pure, whulcbumc uud delicious. WM, *AKiH* POWDER Absolutely Pure FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established IS3B. PUBLISHED EVEUY MONDAY AND TIIUKSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STHEET AUOVK CENTRE. Make all money order#, check#, etc., payable to the Tribune l'rlntlny Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Mmths 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 The date which the subscription is paid to is oil the address label ol' each paper, the change ot' which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep tin* figures in advance of the present date, ltoport prompt ly to this ollice whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. • FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 9, 1897. Democratic County Ticket. The Democrats of Luzerne county were fortunate this year in having none but strong and reliable men to select from in making their ticket, and the result is that they can go before the voters in the coming campaign with full confidence in the nominees. It is customary after conventions are held for the newspapers which are atTiliated with the party to give the candidates laudatory notices and extol their char acters and records, and this, sometimes, when the praise is not fully deserved. However, this year the Democrats have a ticket which Democratic newspapers and Democratic workers can give their unqualified endorsement, without reser vation of any kind, for the nominees are as clean and honorable a set of men as any whose names have ever graced the banners of the old party in this county. Colonel T. R. Martin is a man whose ability, integrity ftnd sterling worth should have been recognized years ago by tin; voters of this county. He stands in the front rank of Luzerne's legal pro fession. hi- lias the necessary experience to fit him for the important position and liis honesty of purpose is a requisite which is sadly needed in the ollice to which he aspires. As district attorney Mr. Martin would bo allowed the oppor tunity to give the public full benefit of his talent, and the standing of the office would, under him, lie raised from the fee-grasping sinecure into which it lias fallen in recent years. He is a Democrat whose services to the party are second to none in Luzerne, who lias helped more Democrats to fame and fortune than any other man in the county, and gratitude from his benefi ciaries alone should win him the elec tion. lint better still is record as a man—and this is what will attract thousands of Republican votes to him and makes his election seem already as sured. Paul Dasch needs no introduction to the voters of this vicinity. His resi dence among them gives them a better idea of who he is and what ho is than words can express. lie is one of those whose presence acts as a sort of inspira tion upon all about hi in. There is a magnetism in his nature which makes friends for him among those whom even ho does not know. His cheerful arid hopeful spirit will add materially to the hopes of his companions. Apart from all this, lie comes from good Democratic stock, is well-educated, and in his hands the slip-shop methods now prevailing in the prothonotary's office would bo rout ed. Edward Lynch, the candidate for clerk of courts, is a young man who is respected by all the people of his town, Plymouth. Everybody in the third district knows him as a capable, intelli gent and honest man who has by hard work equipped himself for life's battles, fie deserves the support of the party. The ticket throughout the county has met with endorsement everywhere, and the indications are that an aggressive battle will be waged by the workers for its election. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The fae- /) tfrZtfass; S. Ililiirntn Your Bowel* With CiiNcnrelii. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. JOe. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. • WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, September 7, 1897. The president, in o:io of his little side diow talks, while junketing around Laki 'hampiain, proclaimed that prosperity uid come to the West and would soon isit the East, and then, like a greai irj.ctical m 1 enium, would spread all ver the country to remain and bless the >eoplo while Ifannaism rules and reigns, '.'lie immediate cause of this jubilant as ertlon was the sudden and unexpected purt in wheat, caused by the slioit rop of other countries, which lie at ributed to the Hanua-Reod robber ariiT. The president doubtless slopped •ver with exultation at the changed con lltion, seeing that his great farmei riends who had so liberally "contri buted" were reaping such a bounteous larvest in gigantic profits. For in stance, there is Farmer IMerpont Mor gan, who generously and magnanimously •ainc to the rescue of the Cleveland ad ministration, and with the patriotic and iisinterested aid of Hanker Rothschilds. aved the nation, raised a crop of f>,000,- 100,000 bushels of wheat in a few days ■vhich netted him the modest little sum if $750,000; Farmer Pillsbury, of Minne apolis, scored a profit in the same length time of $728,000; Farmer Francis, Cleveland's secretary of the interior, pocketed $210,000; good Farmer Armour, who butchers for the continent and •lards the lean earth,'* "all for charity," lulled in $350,000; Farmer Flower, the nan of allopathic dollars and homeo pathic sense, was considerate enough to pick up %125,000 before the supply was 'xhaustcd, to feed the famine-stricken millions; Farmer John Cudaliy stopped packing pork for a few days to pocket 8280,000;•while an innumerable number •f other favorites of the trusts gathered in their millions. That was all well enough for the trusts which farm the farmer, but where does the tiller of tho -mil come in? The Spanish minister is still keeping the revenue cutters of the-United States busy hunting for Cuban filibusters. He informed Secretary Cage that tho fili busters had abandoned Florida as a •tarting point and were preparing to end several expeditions from tho Caro lina coast, and Secretary Gage obedient ly issued an order to the commanders of all revenue cutters in Southern waters to keep an extra close watch on the Carolina coast for filibusters. This sort of work must be more or less disgusting to the officers and men in our revenue marine service, but they have no choice in the matter. They must obey the orders of tho secretary of tho treasury, even if those orders are dictated by tin- Spanish minister. Maj. Moses I*. Handy lias boen ap pointed by President Mckinley as special commissioner to the Paris exposition of 1900 to report on the amount necessary to bo appropriated by congress for tho government exhibit, lie is allowed $25,- 000 for his junketing excursion and a retinue of secretaries, clerks, experts, etc. How is this as an unnecessary ex pense, when all such arrangements could have been constimated through our am bassador to Franco? The llanna ad ministration bids fair to rival the billion dollar congress of Tom Reed if such junketing trips as those are to continue. A Kentucky Democrat, John (1. Woods, of Louisville, lias put a portion of tin administration on pins and needles by bringing a suit against the postmaster general to prevent his removal, without cause, for a position in the classified civil service. Ho obtained a temporary retraining order against his removal, and the hearing was to have taken place Saturday, but tho governor asked for a continuance of one week, and got it. Tho case will probably lie appealed to the United Sates supreme court no mat ter how it may lie decided. According to advices just, received, Senator Burrows lias spent the entire summer in trying to smooth the way for his own return to the senate, and in placing obstacles in tho path of Gover nor Filigree, who thinks lie would fill that senatorial chair much better than Rurrows does, and he is not yet easy in his mind. Pingreo has got Rurrows where he has all the other Michigan Re publicans—afraid of him. The receipts of the government for the month of August, under the Dingley tariff law, were $0,538,582 less the re ceipts for August, 1890, under tho Wil son tariff law. it may bo that the claims of the Republicans as to the revenue-producing qualities of the Ding ley tariff will lie realized at sometime in the future, but the above figures show that they are, as yet, a long way from being realized. Tho Republicans are showing how confident they are of carrying Ohio by colonizing voters there from West Vir ginia and other adjacent states. The Democrats are fully aware of what is lmiug done in that line, and Ross Rami's henchmen will find it much easier to carry men into Ohio and give them temporary work than it will lie to | register and vote them. I The secretary of tho interior has re j ceived a letter from J. G. Brady, gover nor of Alaska, in which lie expresses the opinion that the estimated amount of gold in Alaska is not overestimated. Two Million* u Year. Wln.-n people buy, try und buy again, it menus they're satisfied. Tho people of the United States are now buying Cascarets Candy Cathartic at the rate of two million boxes a year and it will be three million Ite l'ore New Year's. It means merit proved, that Cascarcts are the most delightful bowel regulator for everybody the year round. All ' druggists, 10c, 25c, 50u u box, cure guaranteed. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday, Sept. 1. President Faure returned to France from St. Petersburg and was enthusi astically greeted at Dunkerque and in Paris. Ten minutes after he had passed the Madeleine a bomb exploded within the railing ot the church. No one was injured. Tho bomb thrower is thought to have been insane Returns from the primaries in South Carolina indicate that John L. McLaurin is the popular choice for United States senator The Pennsylvania Democratic state conven tion declared the seat of William F. Harritj in the national committee va cant and chose James M. Guffey to till the place. A free silver platform was adopted, and candidates for auditor general and state treasurer were nom inated Julia S. Campbell tried to shoot George B. Moore, a real estate dealer in New York, with whom she had lived for 13 years as his wife, after discovering that he had deserted her for another woman Miss Bessie M. Cohn was perhaps fatally injured by being struck by tho guard rail of a cable car in New York which a conductor care lessly dropped as she stepped aboard. She was left unconscious on the side walk. and the conductor escaped on his '■ar The Brooklyn police arrested .John HI I lei n ef 205 Moore street on sus picion of being implicated in the murder of George Stelz, the sexton who was killed and robbed in a church A young woman who registered as Miss Blanche Wilson of New York committed suicide in the Victoria hotel in Chicago The Automobile club of Paris is or ganizing a race of motor ears from Paris to St. Petersburg When play ing with matches in an old outbuilding in Fort Wlngate, N. M., used as a store house, little Alice Winstone and Harry Arnold, aged 3 and 4 years, set fire to a can of oil, causing an explosion. Alice was burned beyond recognition. Harry was badly burned about the head and , will die John Roach, one of the oldest I citizens of Yonkers, N. Y., was instantly j killed by falling 2U feet through a trap door in the porch of his home. Tiiurtulay, Sept. 8, Tin- Citizens' Union '( the boroughs o" Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens and ' Richmond formally nominated Setn Low for mayor of the Greater New York. The Brooklyn committee of 50, after an ineffectual attempt to secure delay, stood aloof and took no part in the nomination The Hawaiian sen ate has been called to meet in special session on Sept. 0 to consider the an nexation treaty in advance of action on it by the United States congress According to semiofficial advices re ceived in Washington, Japan is se cretly negotiating with the diet of the Greater Republic of Central Amer ica for control of the Nicaragua n canal project in defiance of the United States The sale of bills of exchange ; or. Calcutta,. Bombay and Madras was I suspended for ten weeks by the British | secretary of state for India Rapid! Pi ogress is being made in the organiza tion cjf expeditions to punish rebellious tribesmen in India The mayor of Toulon, France, was stabbed by a Cor slcan and seriously wounded Four | persons were killed and many seriously ! injured by the wreck of a train on the 1 Brighton railway, near Tunbrldge ; Wells, England Sir Wilfred Laurier, I premier of Canada, received a public | welcome on his return to Ottawa from j the queen's jubilee Twenty-four resi dents of Fairfield county, S. C., charged ' with whipping and driving out Mor- j mon elders und their converts, have been bound over for trial Tramps are said to have robbed the drug store of John Pratt in Phenix, A. T., and stubbed the proprietor, killing him j Mary Clark, a waitress, was assaulted I at Savin Rock, Westhaven, Conn., by • Stephen Jackson, a colored man, who ; drowned himself to escape pursuers The "wild man of the pipe road" at ! Mount Vernon, N. Y., hold up the car- j riage of Frank R. Chambers of New j York, but by whipping the horses tho | occupants escaped Hugo Eberhardt, | reputed son of a Chicago lawyer, was j confined in a cell on the cattle steamer ' Mohican at Boston as a stowaway | Max Feichterman, laborer, was killed ' by the breaking of a derrick in New York Rev. T. M. Kilahy, pastor of , St. Stephen's R. C. church, Brooklyn, j lied in that city. Friday, Sept, 3, Colonel George Bliss, a prominent New York lawyer and politician, died at Wakefield, R. I. Senator Joseph Mullin of Watertown, N. Y., died sud denly 'n his room at the University club in New York General Ignaeio An drade, the Liberal candidate, was elect ed president of Venezuela President McKinley attended a reunion of the survivors of his old regiment at Fre mont, O. Postmaster General Gary issued an order establishing a mail service to the Klondike gold region John D. Rockefeller has given the Bap list Missionary societies $250,000 to pay their debts George I*. Irving, an aeronaut, fell 200 feet at Reading, Pa., but saved his life by his presence of inind in keeping his feet under him General Woodford, minister to Spain, has arranged with the Duke of Tetuan, Spain's foreign minister, for the presen tation of his credentials to the queen regent. All the newspapers in Madrid protest against his mission and have ir ritated public feeling against the Unit ed States A south bound vestibule train on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad ran off the track near Cortland, N. Y. One person was killed, and 15 were injured Angry crowds surrounded a 'tent where Seventh Day Adventists hold meutipgs in Perth Am boy, N. J., and threuts have been made •f tar and feathers because Mrs. Peter Hans Hansen became u convert against the wishes of her husband, who has left her In consequence Herman Nack, whose wife is charged with the murder of William Guldensuppe, has made a statement, in which he makes public Mrs. Naek's practices as a midwife and says she disposed of many bodies of in fants by burning them Herman Ot ten, a young German sailor, was picked up unconscious in the river under the Brooklyn bridge and is supposed to have Jumped or fallen from that struc ture— —The dead body of a negro was found hanging to u trot line In the Ar kansas river, near Rob Roy, Ark. The negro had been lynched——Word has been received at Vancouver, B. <\, that Russia has dispatched 30 officers and H.OOO soldiers t Korea. Saturday, Popt. 4. Five people were killed and 25 or 30 Injured by explosions of natural gas in Broad Ripple, a suburb of Indianapolis Secret* Gage issued instructions to collectors <f customs governing the admission of personal effects under the new tariff law Mrs. George S. But ters was murdered, and her son. Carlton ('. Butters, was probably fatally wound ed for revenge In Concord, Mass., by John W. Harris, a former boarder In their house, who had been convicted of larceny Seth Low was formally no tified in Northeast Harbor, Me., of his nomination by the Citizens' union foi mayor of Greater New York and an nounced that he would accept. He will resign from the presidency of Colum bia university at the next meeting of the trustees It was announced that Rifaat Pasha is to succeed Mustap/ia Bey as Turkish minister at Washing ton In the pacing race between Star Pointer anil Joe Patchen at Hartford Star Pointer won In two straight heats, the best time being 2.03% The re ceivers of the Massachusetts Benefit Life association were ordered by the court in Boston to wind up tho affairs of the concern A passenger train and a freight train met in a head on colli sion at Floral Park, on the Long Island railroad, and five persons were injured, none fatally A company has been In corporated In New York with a capital of $73,000,000 to construct a ship canal through Florida, connecting ocean and gulf The Vigilant defeated the Nava hoe in a race off Newport, R. 1., for a cup offered by the Newport Racing as sociation Colonel William J. Lyster, on the retired list of the army, died in Sackets Harbor, N. Y. A terrible explosion of coal dust occurred in the old mine, owned by the Colo rado Fuel and Iron company, 12 miles from Glenwood Springs, Colo. Roughs in a Jersey City car pulled out handfuls of Isaac Glickman's whiskers, and he sued the company for damages. The case was decided against him The Jackson-Harmsworth expedition reach ed London from Franz Josef Land. The party explored Franz Josef Land thor oughly and found the most open north sea in the world to the northward. Gillis Land does not lie where arctic geographers have placed It and may be believed to be nonexistent. Monday, Kept. 0. The three masted schooner Agnes I. Grace capsized and rank off the Geor gia coast. She had on board four 16-ton guns for the Tybee fortifications. Her crew was saved Charles Smith of New York and William Mines of Phila delphia, who were riding on a Pennsyl vania freight train from Philadelphia to Jersey City, wore assaulted, robbed and thrown from the train by eight ne gro tramps Emperor William, in proposing a toast to King Humbert at the Kurhaus in Homburg, affirmed the existence of the drelbund. King Hum bert made his reply in French. He compliment d Emperor William on his efforts to maintain peace by the drel bund. Queen Margherlta of Italy was appointed chief of the Eleventh battal ion of chasseurs by Emperor William Assistant Postmaster General Heath has made a report to the court of claims in favor of paying about $250,000 to the Western Union Telegraph company for services rendered to the government be tween ISB9 and 1S!3 The opening of the Christian Alliance convention on South mountain, near Nyack, N. Y., at tracted large crowds, to whom Rev. Dr. Simpson declared the end of the world was near at hand In a rear end collision at Fort Lee, N. J., nearly all the passengers in two trolley cars were more or less injured, and a motorman, taken from the wreck unconscious, may not recover England and France will import the American bronco for caval ry service. Cowboys rode two of these horses as a test from Sherman, Wy., to Chicago, 2,500 miles, at an average of 45 miles a day The bodies of For rest H. Parker, Jr., and his wife, who were drowned on Saturday in Chain pond, were recovered An excursion train was wrecked on the Maine Cen tral railroad near Etna, Me. One per son was killed and 32 were injured Egyptian cotton crop is double that of 10 years ago and worth £1,000,000 more than that of 1896 Hermann lteubold, a young German, fell in a faint on the sidewalk in New York. He tells a piti ful story of starvation, and the doctors at Bellevuc"'hospital say his condition is critical. Tuesday, Sept. 7. New Orleans physicians reported a death in that city from yellow fever. Health authorities of several Southern states quarantined against Ocean Grove, Miss., where the disease is prev alent Residents of Herber, Ark., and Southport. N. C,, threaten to take into their own hands the work of driving out two peculiar bands of religious fa natics who are growing in influence in those places An eagle had a fierce fight with a bull pup which he attempt ed to carry away from the kennels of J. Plerpont Morgan, near Highland Falls, N. Y. William F. Cochran formally presented a fully equipped six story clubhouse to the workingmen of Yonkers, N. Y. It was estimated by The Mark Lane Express of London that the deficiency in the world's wheat supply would be 14,000,000 quarters The court martial at Barcelona, Spain, sentenced Barrll, the anarchist, to 40 years' imprisonment It is reported that Herr Krupp's offer of £25,000 for Dr. Peters' next expedition to Africa has been withdrawn President Mc- Kinley left Canton for Somerset, Pa., where he is to visit his brother, Abner McKinley A British state secret just revealed indicates that Queen Victoria averted war between Great Britain and the United States over the seizure of the Confederate envoys Mason und Slidell tn a British vessel in 1861 Fred J. Titus of the Riverside Wheel* men. New York, won the final heat in the Quil| club's two mile handicap race at Manhattan Beach, defeating Eddie JJald among others. The prize was •f 1.000 in gold—r—Veterans of the Army of the Potomac unveiled a monument to commemorate the valor of the Sev enty-third Volunteer regiment of New York, or the Second Fire zouaves, at Gettysburg It is tacitly understood at the stute department at Washing-! ton that General Lee's leave of abr pence from Cuba means his resignation Three tramps were burned to death in the jail ut Conway. N. If., whence it is believed they tried to escape by burning a hole In the wall A Wa bash train near Forelstell, Mo., struck u bull, derailing 10 cars, killing u tramp and fatally wounding the engineer Fire from a cinematograph caused a panic in the Orpheum Variety theater, San Francisco, but no one was much hurt St. Louis men have proposed to ask John Philip Sousa to write the words and music of a national hyinn fur organized labor. 1 NOVEL SHOWER BATH. A Device Couilinln Exercise auU the Aloruliitf Ablutluna. At the. recent cycle show in Paris, a prominent English bicycle manufnc- I urer presented a novelty culled u "Velo- Douclie," which is an eminently prac tical device for combining exercise and the morning ablutions. Many wheel men have doubtless often desired to obtain a shower bath ufter violent ex ercising on the wheel, so as to obtain the sedative effect of the brisk reaction. Many bicycle and athletic clubs are provided with every facility for ob taining this end, but such means are not always nt the disposal of the rider, especially in the country. The device which we illustrate is really a combination of the home ex erciser and shower bath, and it enables the rider to obtain any amount of ex ercise desired with or without the bath. The machine consists of a shallow tub to which is secured a framework car- VELOCIPEDE SHOWER DATII. rying a bicycle saddle, a handle bar, pedals, sprocket wheels and chain. The resemblance to thebicycle goes no furth er. The small sprocket wheel which is driven from the large sprocket on the main shaft by the medium of a chain is secured to a small rotary pump which is fastened at tho rear of the frame. 1 he suction pipe of the pump ends near I the bottom of the tub and the discharge ! pipe is curved as shown in the engrav ing and ends in the sprinkler arrange ment common to all shower baths. A cock half-way up the discharge pipe permits of the water being turned on to the sprinkler or through the hose and nozzle, depending on whether a bath is j desired or not. It is, of course, perfectly possible to obtain the exercise without gettingwet, the pump furnishing the resistance nec | essary for the exercise {Hid the water which is pumped being discharged by means of the rubber tube and nozzle. When the rider has exercised sufllcient ly, he can reach backward and turn the cock so as to let the water pass upward and out of the sprinkler. The harder he pedals, the larger the stream. It is possible to direct u stream of water on any part of the body by means of tho nozzle connected with tho rub ber tube. The tub can be divided into two compartments, one containing hot water and the other cold water, and the cohl and hot douche may then be used at will. The device could be made to set in any ordinary bathtub. It would seem that the "Yelo-Douche" has a future j for use in the cycle clubs, riding acade mies, sanitariums and in the army.— I Scientific American. USE OF TCE CLIPS. They Are of Ileal Vnlnc In Spite ot Old TrudltioiiM. Many cyclists scoru the use of toe | clips as the fad of the scorcher. That ! is where they err. A sense of security jis invaluable to the cyclist. If he is well seated and feels certain of a firm i hold upon grips and pedals, the diffi ' culties and annoyances of rough rid- I ing are greatly lessened. The toe clip, | as applied to the old-time wheel, was a j most dangerous thing for road use. and affected only by daring riders who i fancied imitation of the racing man the chief end of cycling existence. But the invention of the "safety" and con sequent passing of the "header" ad vanced the clip to a leading place among accessories and gave it new im portance. The common assertion that I the toe clip is dangerous may be re ' garded as wholly due to lingering mem ; ories of bruised heads and bloody noses, j primarily caused by misplaced confi dence In the appurtenances in 'he days of its use on the high bicy eie. The only fall ± sane rider can get from a safety I is a .side fall, the bad results of which cannot be much increased through a use I of toe clips. Illcyclen In Aimtralla. j American bicycles are the favorites in Australia, according .to the report ot Mr. Marat ta, United Stutes consul-gen oral at Melbourne, Last year Victoria | imported $1,478,713 worth of bicycles. which sold there at prices ranging from j $55 to $145 each. The American wheels ! secured the highest price, and are best liked. It is tho practice of soancdealers to sell wheels on time payment for tho exact amount of the monthly suburban railway tickets, so that at tlie end of u certain time the huvcr seems to obtain his bi cycle free of cost. All the leading Amer ica.li wheels are represented by agencies | in Australia, and there is complaint that tho trade ia overdone, receiving .15 per cent, more bicycles in proportion to Imputation than any oilier country. Plants Inert In Commerce. In Europe at the present day about 4,000 plants are collected for commercial purposes, 420 of them being sought | for their perfume. There are gathered 1.124 species of white flowers, 051 of | yellow, 823 of red, 504 of blue and f>o* ot violet, and 187 of the white flowers have pleasing odors. 77 of the yellow, 84 of the red, 34 of the blue and 1.1 or the violet, AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTOBIA," AND "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADEMARK. I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now on every bear the facsimile signature of wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought on the and has the signature of wrap per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. /> - . March 8,1897. ,p. Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in gredients of which even he docs not know. "The Kind Yon Have Always Bought" Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed Yon, GREAT BARGAINS IN Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. Notions, Carpel, Boots and Shoes, Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, Tin and ljuecnsinare, Wood u/wZ Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Ktc. \ A celebrated brand of XX fiour always in stock. Roli Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My motto is small profits and quick Bales. ! I always iiuve lresh goods and um turning my stock every month. Every article is guarantee^ AMANDUS OSWALD, N. IK. Cor. Centre ami. Front Ste., Freeland. \ P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director and Embalmsr. . | Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. Smith Centre street, Freeland. VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE DREAD OE ALL KINDS CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES RAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery 's Ice Cream supplied to ljiills, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and eup]>ly wayom to all parte oj tuwn and Hurronndinye every day. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy reading the literary productions of the best talent in 1 Liu Catho lic priesthood und laity (and you know whut * they CAN do), UH they appear weekly tu The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The ablest and inoHt vigorous deb-nder of Catholicism. All the news-strong edito rials— u children's department, which is olo vating and educational. Prizes offered monthly to the little ones. Only ti'l.OO per year. TheOnmdest Premium over issued bv any paper given to subscribers for 1W.7. Heud for sample copies und premium circular. The Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co 508-505 Chestnut St. I'hiln. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Froelnnd. FINEST LIQUOR. DEER, PORTER, ALE. CIGARS AND TEM PERANCE DRINKS., Best Cough byrup. Tastes Good. ÜBO W In time. Hold by druggists. ul GBEEEiaizemgs y- ATE* | mm- Wheels, | I ijmiitj rs*" Too! j STYLES: j? | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem, i % % 5 Tho Lightest Running Wheels on Earth. \* 1 THE ELDREDOE E | I ....AND.... s THE BELVIDERE. j I - k We always Made Good Sowing Machines! £ Why Shouldn't wo MakoCood Wheels! 3 § | 6 \ A National Sewing Machine Co., i v 5 ,jj! 339 Broadway, Factory: New York. Belvldere, Ills. $ POWER! additional ex- (PW'MI f.M 'Sb-* W jinnou can bo bad by using The Victor Yapor Engine manufactured by Thop. Kiuio & Co., Clilciigo. Steady speed, easy to start,- always re liable, absolutely safe, all parts inter changeable, adapted for any class of work requiring power. J. D. MYERS, FREELAND, PA. Call or send for e.atalogues and prices. I Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-1 * cat business conducted for MODERATE FEES. 4 JOUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE # 5 and wc can secure patent in less time than those i 4 remote from Washington. ? j Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- # Stion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of? 4 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 4 J A PAMPHLET, "HOW to Obtain Patents," with# Jcost of same in the U.S. and foreign countiies 2 £ sent free. Address, J IC.A.SWOW&CO.I OPP. PATENT D. C. G. HORACK, Baker & Confectioner. Wholesale and lietail. CENTRE STEEET, FREELAND. Dr. N. MALEY, Second Floor, Birkbeck Brick. OVER BIUKUECK'S STORE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers