6 PITHY PLEA OF A CHILD. I think the world Is really sad, I can do nothing hut annoy; Tor little boys are all born bad. And I am born a little boy. tt doesn't matter what's the game. Whether It's Indians, trains, or ball; I always know I am to blame, If I amuse myself at all. [ said one day on mother's knee: "If you would send us right away To foreign lands across the sea, You wouldn't see us every day. •We shouldn't worry any more. In those strange lands with queer new toys: But here we stamp and play, and roar. And wear your life out with our noise. "The savages would never mind. And you'd be glad to have us go There, nobody would be unkind, For you dislike your children so." rhan mother turned, and looked quite red, I do not think she could have heard; ghe put me off her knee instead Of •nswering me a single word. She went, and did not even nod. What had I said that could annoy T Mothers are really very odd If you are born a little boy. -Spectator. fbee-lance. By CHAL'NCY C. HOTCHKISS [Copyright, 1607, by D. Appleton & Co. All rights reserved.] CHAPTER XVII. —CONTINUED. I had worked with feverish haste, know ing that the outcome of this episode with the Ajax would terminate for good or evil in a mighty short time. Once they ran off our track we would be comparatively safe, though, to lessen this possibility, I sur mised that they would themselves be guided by the drift, only using their oars that they might make their speed greater than that of the schooner. By so following they might hope to overtake us, and doubt lex* would have done so only we were now at the point where the rush of the Hudson meets that of the Sound river, and the rips and whirlpools formed by the mingling of these waters oil and below Nutten's island were constantly creating counter streams and cross currents that shifted and spun with the minutes, ever changing and never at rest save at the brief intervals of slack wiUer on the turning of the tides. Beyond the gurgling and rushing of the stream not a sound could I now hear, though once or twice I was sure I caught tiie thumping of oars in their tholes and h sari voices of men. But if 1 did, they went wide of us, for the minutes swung into half till hour at least, and the half hour into a whole one, yet nothing of the boats from the Ajax did I see. And now 1 took a deep breath and moved, for during this time of terrible suspense we 011 deck had barely stirred. Not a sound had come from below, nor had an attempt to uncovtfr the windows been made, and yet 1 knew one man had a broken nose from a musket butt, and both must be< [tressed for want of air. Mistress Gertrude still sat on the cabin top, and crouched low near the companion door, with pistol in harul, was hei brother. As patient as.was this girl, she was human flesh, and a delicate bit of femininity at that. %'lie cabin top couM not be made perma nent quarters for her, and, though I believe she would have collapsed from sheer exhaus tion ere offering a word of complaint, it was an uncalled-for sacrifice for her to remain longer unsheltered and seated on bare, hard planking. Up to the present comfort had not been considered, but now that imme diate danger was past, I turned my thoughts to the young lady, and cast about for a re treat to which she might retire. Save the hold or the forecastle, no spot was avail able, and either would be repugnant to one of her fastidious tastes. Still, shelter she must have; I would see to it presently, but now I became more than curious tp know what devilment was meant by the continued silence of the two desperate men caged in the cabif!. It struck me that the quiet, coupled with what ha*i gone before, might bear a mighty significance, and going softly to a corner of the tarpaulin, I quickly threw it up and looked in. The light was out. Drawing back out of range I called Scammefl by name, and then Lounsbury, but received no reply. Putting the threat of death in my demand for an answer, I still received noth ing in return; so clambering to the cabin top, I laid my ear above a dead-Mght to catch a sound of movement within, but bad hardly taken my position when both nose and lungs were assailed by such a mixed stench of burned powder, lamp soot, rum and foulness in general as to almost turn my stomach, though it at once cleared up the mystery. Here, now, was my tnreat to stifle them carried out better than I knew. Dragging ofi the tarpaulin, I pushed away the hutch cover, drew the bayonet from the staple, forced back the companion slide and en tered. The first thing I did was to stumble over a man's body on the floor, and then I turned and got to the deck, for the air in tilt; cabin was more than I could at once endure. Letting the place clear for a little, I fetched the galley tantern and went down once more. The cabin was yet filled with a heavy blue mist, and the sulphurous fumes were choking. Lounsbury lay on the floor with his face covered with apparent ly dead, both eyes being swollen and his countenance blackened beyond recognition. His companion sat on the cushioned tran som, jammed into a corner betwixt a berth a*d the bulkhead. He was unconscious, und, with his tongue hanging out, was breathing feebly. Physically he was alive, but, through liquor and foul air, was so dead drunk that nothing could have roOsed him. Three empty brandy bottles lay about, together with Scammell's saber, a br'iken sword, pistols and tobacco pipes, while on the table, the cotton cover of which was burned to ashes, were the remains of a leathern powder pouch rent by explosion. No wonder thfty had succumbed. In their tipsiness, or through the carelessness of desperation, they had fired their ammuni tion, the amount not having been sufficient to cause more than the muffled blow and flash 1 had heard and seen on the instant of our being hailed by the Ajax. This, with the smoke of the previous firing, together with the heat and closeness of the quarters, had created a smudge and foulness in which none but a drunkard could ha\e l,ivi>d a minute. They had evidently been deep in some scheme to blow open the forward door (which showed signs of attack) when a spark from a pipe caused the plot to harass the plotters Lounsbury had been the chief sufferer, and thus was accounted for his blackened face and his cry for air and water. However, it tould not have lut my turn better had I laid the train of events myself, nor was it long before 1 had the two lying on the deck and knew the cabin wag sweet eu*ng and would soon be a lit retreat for Miss King. Neither was it long before 1 discovered that Lounsbury was not as dead as he was drunk, though hardly as far gone in liquor as Scammell, who could have been pitched over the rail and passed to the next world without the slightest inconvcniance to himself. And more's the pity 'twas not done. Like hags of dunnage I took them by their collars, hauling them amidships, and then clapped the wrists and legs of both into irons, articles which in those days stood somewhat ahead of the medicine chest in importance, and frequently in use. With a mingled feeling of pity, hatred, and disgust, I soused the sots with a bucket of salt water, and then left them for Nature to bring to life. As I moved aft I caught the freshness ,of a small, early morning breeze, and felt that ere long the protecting blanket of fog would be rolled away. Much would I have given for a knowledge of our exact where abouts, but as this was impossible, nothing remained but to prepare the schooner for sailing as soon as we could get our bearings. 'Twas a small job to cast off the gaskets and get loose the headsails ready for hoisting, but another matter for Ames and myself alone to run the heavy canvas of the main and foresails to their mast head*. I was fearful that the rattling blocks and rustling of the great cloths might herald our situa tion, but nothing came of it, and after a deal of hauling we got something like a slack set to the sails which for months had been mildewing against their booms. Gradually a lividnesa came over the fog, and, as the light of the coming day strength ened, it showed the mist driving across us like wads of smoke. As the light broadened I went to the binnacle to see how we were heading, but found the compass gone from it, and, on examination, discovered that all my instruments had been confiscated saving the telltale screwed into the cabin ceiling. This, like the hanging lantern, was be grimed by a white deposit from the explo sion, but, on clearing 14 with my palm, I found we were heading north by east, or still going stern on toward the south. So matters went till sunrise, the wind growing fresher as the time sped, and at last, white Ames and myself were putting J the cabin into some shape anil the girl had j gone to overhaul the pack of provisions, I j heard her give a great cry, and rushed to ! the deck to find its meaning. It was no alarm. She was standing by the I fore shrouds looking at the sudden trans- j formation which had come over the face of j Nature. Often have I seen the sun rise, but never did it appear in such a grandeur of pearl and grays. The glory of its com- ; ing was none the less for the iaek of vivid | coloring. The fog had rolled olf as rol!s-a curtain, and to the east and north lay piled in towering masses ranging from thunder ous blackness to the opalescent clearness <4 a seasheli. Through its misty caverns shot dazzling shafts of sunshine, which wavered and played over the face of the bank like the tremulous shifting of the northern lights. Astern, clear as far as one could sec, lay the ocean blank of all sail, the snia.ll summer waves gliuting back the strong light from the east. To the west and over, our larboard beam stood out the green heights of Staten island, and under their shelter I marked two heavy ships of the line, while toward Sandy Hook lay two others with sails furled and at anchor. Gravesend bay also held one, a mammoth, which I took to be the Cerberus, but not a ship was alert. No more were in sight, and I marveled that we had run the gantlet of the fleet, thinking, naturally, that most of tnein had gone up the bay and must have lain close to our track. Little I knew that the bulk of Lord Howe's flotilla had sailed east the day before, and thus opened the path that otherwise would in all likelihood have been blocked. But so it was, and later I knew we had the French to thank for having drawn them away. Doubtless we were marked by a hundred eyes on board those about, but the levia thans were powerless to harm us, their vary size and ponderosity shackling them against quick action. Close aboard and on our starboard beam lay the white sand spit cf the lower island which goes far to make New York harbor the»haven it is, and once past this wilderness of ljeaeh, now known as Norton's Point, we would be on the sea. With a shout of relief almost delirious I sprang forward and mastheaded both jib and staysails, while Ames jumped for the main sheet and drew it in. It was the first inkling I had that he was anything of a sailor, and the knowledge was mighty wel come. Slowly we came about until the tchooner nosed into tire west wind, and then he ran to the helm while I caught the draught with the headsail to help her get ting past the point of "irons;" then I be layed both jib and staysail sheets. But of what use are these details? Enough to tell that presently we were slipping east ward and [iast the Dry Homer, the sails swung wing-on wing, and an air, which turned to a calin as we fled, pushing us from over the taffrail and toward the rising sun. CHAPTER XVIII. PURSUED. All that morning we sailed almost as blithely as ever pleasure seekers sailed a | summer sea. True it was that a measure of ' anxiety still hampered my spirits, but as j compared with tvlmt we had undergone, i we were at heart as light as the filmy mares' | tails floating athwart the blue above. And i even now, while tragedy might be lurking ! near, there was an element of the ridiculous j in our appearances, too marked not to be t noticed by each of us. The girl, with a ! natural care of herself, was the most pre- j sentable of the three and looked to be but a j proper youth; but 'twas Ames who gave I color to the ship's present company, lie had retained his wig—to make his hat fit, j he said—ami what with his fresh face, whit# ' hair, and clothes still mud-stained from Ins j fall into the ditch the night before, he was | a sight to behold. As for myself, I appeared i to be in the last stage of dilapidation. A 1 four days' growth of dark beard, my cloth- I ing burned, rain-soaked and ragged, my j linen a shock to the eye, my queue ribbon- j less, and my hair streaming about my shoul- j ciers, I made a picture fit to repel the girl. I Two days before, her likes or dislikes would | not have caused me a second's thought, but now somehow my very size seemed to me ob- j trusive, and, coupled with my outward state, shamed me luto au avoidance of her close observance. But no change could 1 make in her manner j v hen necessity brought us together, iler j smile was as bright— ay, brighter—than the ; dazzling sea about us, lier voice as free from m.rvous tremulousness, arid her manner as j self-contained as though she was trading a j ballroom floor instead jf the grimy, slowly j heaving deck of a fugitive schooner. Once i she had laid her hand on mine as 1 stood at | the wheel, and seemed to be about to speak to me, giving a quick upward glance ot her dark eye, though lowering her gaze as quick ly; but as her brother hove aft just then, CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1900. she turned away and went below to the cabin, which by this had been given over to her exclusive use. I minded me that it was I to whom she first brought an allowance of salt beef and ship's bread, and let her brother wait. Somehow the fact wanned me, and then 1 apostrophized myself for a faol for having thought of it. How she regarded her ci devant lover I had easily seen in the way she turned her head and made a wide de tour when necessity compelled her to pass him where he sprawled on the deck, his re pulsiveness as much, if not more marked than his companion's, owing to the tarnished richness of his once glittering uniform. The prisoners had so far recovered as to be maud lin, and in their restlessness had rolled into the scuppers. The sight of them was an evil easily remedied, and, as air and light were no longer imperative to their well being. I had taken them into the forecastle and laid them each in a bunk, that they might finish off the fumes of liquor without o'.leuse to decent eyes. Once onto blue water we held a council tc determine our destination. It was safer, I thought, to land my passengers on the Jersey coast and by myself try to work un der short sail to New London, where was consigned the schooner's cargo. But neither brother nor sister would hear of such a move. Washington having withdrawn to the north, there could be no telling the state of southern Jersey, especially as it had been overrun with bands of marauders known as "Sandhillers," and, there being no safe objective for the fugitives, to land would be but beginning anew a search for refuge. Without money (though I would make a shift to remedy the lack of that), without friends and with a price on their heads, a change to the pine wilderness of the western coast would be scarce an improve ment over the deck of the Phantom, out lawed though she was. Such was their argu ment. As for myself, nothing would have now j tempted me to desert the vessel. By hold | ing a course well south, clinging only to the | loom of the Long Island coast as a guide (for I had no sure compass), I might run 1 across a Yankee privateer or find protec | tion in a possible French cruiser. At this i moment I had recovered all I had Vnst and | mere. The schooner with its cargo was in j tact; the gold was still in the cabin; I had been enriched by several rolls of money | from Clinton (though I had not yet counted I the coin, only guessing at its value by its | drag on my pocket), while below were Lounsbury and a prisoner of rank. More I than these, I had the knowledge of a move j to be made toward the relief of Newport by ; the British, and —here I was honest with "He was unconscious." myself as I thus compiled my gains—I had two friends, one of whom, oath or no oath, should come to no harm from mankind while I had an arm to interpose. I had suggested the Jersey shore as a mat ter of duty. I had heard their determina tion to abide with nie and share my for tune, be it high or low, with something of a feekng that put a new power into me, and, I fancy, a new light in my ere (had they been looking closely), not caused by the dazzle of the sun. Our destination lay, then, tirst for the Vineyard. There I would place this now homeless girl in care of my mother and sister, who were probably mourning f6r me as lost, then to New London to deliver prisoners and cargo to the proper authori ties, and after that —well, I would wait and iee. Ay, I would wait and see. One need not plan one's life for months ahead. Somehow there was a brilliant spot ' n the future which 1 eared neither to define or get be hind—a Will-o'-the-wisp both tangible and elusive whieh I could not analyze, being content with glow it spread over my mental picture. The radiance lay on the ancient island farm. It fell on the ancient house and livened ij£ homely interior. It v. F.nt abroad over familiar fields, dusky woodlands and swamim, and gave n color to the stretches of lonely beach.. It made life more than living, nod changed the dross of existence into something very like gold. ' I knew I was dreaming dreams and build ! ing air castles as I stood my trick at the I wheel and hove it over to meet the low-run | n ; ng swell and forestall the vessel's yaw. i but what picture equals that of the brain? I In progressive stages I mentally doubled j Montauk, raised Blockhouse island, sunk it, and saw the mist of Norman's Land, and ' then swept around the great western clay I cliffs of the Vmeyard, and was at home, j Every detail was reijl, yet fairer than reality, j By some queer change in me I looked less for glory now than I had the month before. | War was well enough if it must be; glory was , a prize easily gotten, but there was nothing j to equal psace. I had tamed wonderfully; j nothing to equal the delights of home and i domesticity. I had acquitted myself before j my fellow-i, and for a time would rest on j my honors. In short, I had by then gotten , into a weak-kneed mood, the like of which ' every man knows at some moment of his j life; harmless enough, possibly, and for the | -rijoyment o< which he can thank God for J withholding the knowledge of what the next hour lias in store. By this it was about four in the afternoon as I figured from the height of the SUM, j which, though clear, shone from a sky that i had become flaked as though a fine-drawn 1 smoke had settled over it. Though the 1 wind hung still from the west, it was lighter, ; and the schooner dragged through the water as if it was traveling uphill. Its sluggish i ness I knew was due somewhat to the char- I acter of its cargo, which was the deadest of I dead weights, but more to the marine • growth which had collected on her bottom : during her long anchorage, and which could | easily be seen streaming below like a long and ragged green beard. Beyond the dull gurgie of the cutwater and an occasional sob in our wake, not A sound broke the intense stillness of the afternoun. Ames was for ward, guarding the forecastle batch, and his sister had gone below. From the prisoners i who had come at last to a realizing sense' of their position) nothing had been heard beyond a demand for water, which had been given to them, and air, ocean, and schooner, v.ith all on board, had quieted into what badt? fair to become a dead calm. We had seen a number of sail during the day, but nothing had as yet come hull above the horizon, even these showing south and west mere specks of light against the pear! of the sky line. I thanked God for the scare given the British by the advent of the French fleet, and knew that each cable's length we made to the east brought us so much nearer safety. The day was waning; night would soon be on us, and if the wind held, under cover of darkness we would be secure in our flight, and possibly the mor row's sun might rise and show nie the gor geous reds and yellows of Gay Head bluff with its cap of green turf, a sign that we were in home waters. Even as my heart warmed at the thought, I cast my eye landward over the larboard quarter and saw coming out of the haze which had all but blotted out the Long Island coast a topsail schooner bearing southeast or directly toward the Phantom. She was some five or six miles away, but even at that distance I could see by her slope that she had found a fresh slant of wind, and that from her forward cloths to the tip of her main boom every rag was drawing, her progress being mightily helped by the square sail set on her foretopmast. There was no knowing what she was, but the fact that any craft had gotten so close without having been marked, gave me a start, and I put the helm down that the jib and staysails might draw, which would at the same time bring the stranger over our taffrail. A landlubber could have seen she was no Frenchman, for the Gaul had a style of cut, rake and carry, all his own, be sides which they were not given to sailing small craft in these waters. She might be a privateer, in which case all would be well, but if not, and I feared my own intuition, then my air castles were doomed to ruin, my borrowed happiness was but the swan acng of hope, my dream that of a con demned man. The jibing of the foresail and my hail to Ames brought Miss King to the deck. Her brother joined us, and we three stood look ing at the oncoming vessel which had ap peared like a cloud to mar the brightness of a perfect day. There was no need to ex plain the menace lying beneath that bunch of swollen canvas. By the faces of the two I saw they realized it was a plain case of chase, tiie only doubt being whether it would prove for good or evil. I would have given the gold in !">' pocket for a good glass with which to make her out, but, as that was impossible, it took me but a few seconds to come to the conclusion that our only hope ;and that a slim one) was to make the chase a stern one and give the p or I'hantoru, with her foui bottom, all the speed possible. Putting the wheel in charge of Ames, with no loss of words I went forward, clambered up the fore shrouds and managed alone to unfurl the square sail, settling the bracing and the sheet and tack on my return to the deck. In the present light air the pull of the canvas was small, but it was something, and I knew the stranger would mark the increase of sail ami read as plainly as print that we wanted nothing of her. [TO BE CONTINUED.] Fine IN'oplc in 17S!>. My lady was as reckless as my lord, and rattled the dicebox and shuttled the cards from dusk till morning, going home with ruined fortunes, in her se dan chair, when workmen were going home from lathe and loom to break fast. Family diamonds and jewels and plate were staked when the guineas were exhausted, and when these pos sessions had gone farms and estates were sacrificed. The amusements, too, of wealthy people were of a coarse and cruel description. Bat-worrying, cock fighting and badger-baiting were fa vorite diversions, Prize fighting was regarded as essential to keep up the courage of Englishmen. Even the clergy joined in these low and brutal pastimes and neglected their spiritual duties, or cut short a Sunday afternoon service sooner than miss being pres ent at a main of cocks or seeing two men entering the ring for the express purpose of pommeling one another, breaking ribs, damaging noses, knock ing out teeth, and cracking jaws. The devotional life of the church was dis tinguished by all the apathy that pre* vailed during the Georgian period; the sacred edifices were dormitories for the living as well as of the dead; but the work of Whitefield and the two brothers WesJey had helped to breathe new life into the dry bones of the es tablishment. —Chambers' Journal. Snbtletlen. Intercourse witlu Christians bad given the savage a taste not only for rum, but for dialect subtleties as well. "I spare your life," he said to the cap tive. "Thank you," the captive replied, not forgetting his manners. "So you owe me your life, don't you?" asked the savage. "Oh, yes," said the captive. "Well, then, if I take your life, I won't be stealing, will I?" exclaimed th# savage. It was clear this benighted person took a truly civilized delight in bun coing his ethical sensibilities for the benefit of his propensities.—Detroit Journal. Tit for Tat. Croo what else could 1 do? —Harlem Life. Aotronoiiileal Item. Although quite youthful in his ap pearance, Johnnie Chaffie, like "littlt- Willie" in the well-known ballad, is de cidedly precocious. When the teacher asked the class: "Are there oilier moons besides ours?" Johnnie jumped up, and exclaimed: "Yes, there's the honeymoon!"— Tammany Times. "Scorpion!" he hissed, a/ter the other fellow had kicked him. "Lucky for you I ain't a centipede," retorted the kicker. —lof .u Topics. HAS A RUBBER TONGUE. New York Victim uf the Smoking Habit M»ile Whole AKUIII liy a Surgical Operation. Science lias enabled a man togo tliroughlife with an artificial nose and Lmbs that often defy' detection, but one of the roost novel inventions of modern surgery is a tongue made of rubber and resting on a pivot set be tween the teeth. There is a man in Kew York who can show this won derful mechanism. This man is George Henderson. He s 47 years old and for many years had GEORGE HENDERSON. (Known to His Frierda aa tha Man with the Rubber Tong-ue.) been an inveterate smoker, often using 15 cigars a day. Excessive use of to bacco caused a cancer of the tongue, and the organ, had to be removed. This operation was most difficult and according to the New York Her ald, performed in Bellevue hospital. It was necessary to saw through the lower jaw at the center and remove two lower front teeth, together with a portion of the jawbone on either side of these teeth. When this was done the surgeons removed two-thirds of the anterior part of the tongue, leaving only the base of the organ. The severed ends of the jaw were reunited with wire. Henderson then left the hospital, the surgeons giving" him little hope of ever being able to eat solid food. Mr. Henderson finally went to the New York college of dentistry, where Dr. Frederick Bradley took charge of his case. He sawed through the jaw again and adjusted its sides evenly, bringing tliem in as close impact as possible. A metal cap was placed over all of the lower teeth and held in po sition by a clamp on either side of the mouth fastened under the chin. After the patient hnd worn this for five weeks it was removed, and it was found that the several parts of the jaw had reunited. Henderson was still unable to eat solid food, because he had no tongue to pass it back into the oesophagus. To overcome this difficulty the sur geon constructed an artificial tongue. A rim of gold was made to fit the inner surface of the lower teeth. This was beveled off toward the lower edge and attached to a wire clasp which fitted over one of the back teeth on either side. A bar of German silver was fastened across the mouth from one of the back teeth to another op posite. This was inclosed in a tube of the same metal of sufficient size to permit it to rotate easily on the bar. A tongue of red vulcanized rubber was made to fit about the tube. The rear of the rubber tongue was bev eled off toward the bottom and placed under the base of the real tongue, so that the least movement of the mus cles pressed down on the rubber, throwing the tongue up. Henderson is now able to talk as distinctly and freely a.she ever did, and eats with ease and freedom. VICTOR OF COLESBERG. Gen. French the Only Ilrltlwh Officer tn South Africa Who HUM Mot Ueen Uefeated by the lluer«, Maj. Gen. John D. P. French, who commanded the British forces at Coles berg, is the only British commander in South Africa who has not been defeated by the Boers. He has proved himself as capable as his friends in England be- GEN. JOFTN D. P. FRENCH. (Only British Commander In Africa Who lias Won a Battle.) lieved hiin to be when he was placed in command of the cavalry in South Af rica. He has demonstrated what can be done by a general who knows how to direct the movements of his troops with skill. The British success at lilands laugte was achieved through the carry ing out of his plans. French is a young soldier who began his career in the navy, but left that arm of the service for the cavalry. He was lately in charge of the brigade at Aldershot, where he proved himself very efficient. His ac tive work in the field was limited to some service in Egypt, but what little he had to do there was well done, ne U 47 yea'B old. SSOO Reward The above Reward will be paid for £»> Nrmation thtt will lead to the arrest aii eonTictioii of (be party or partiea whe placed iron «D>i ilnba on the track of the Emporium & Rich Valley R. R., DMI he east line of Franklin Hruflfj's fum, m the eveuicK of NOT. 21ct, 1801. lit.NRT AFCHD, 88-tf. l\r*\de*t. FINE LIQUOR SIOKE —w EMPORIUM, PA. THE nnderatyned baa opened a flia% olaaa Liocor ato re, and invitee Sss trade of Hotels, Restaurants, to We aball carry cone bat the best ASM* loan and Imported WHISKIES, BRANDIES GINS AND WINES, BOTTLED ALE, CHAMPAGNE, Eto Ctaoloe Bne at Bottled Goods. r addition to ED 7 iun lino •' Hq«oo» I I •onitaatly la atock a fell Ha* o t CIGARS AND TOBACCO. tWtool and Billiard BootnlaaamobmlUlac.'m CALL ANT) HIE MB. A. A. MoDONALD, PROPRIETOR, EMPORIUM, PA !F. X. BLUMLE, | IMPOKIDM, VA. Bottler •( and Daalar toff ( BEER, | WINES, j! WHISKIES, & ■S, And Liquors of All Kinds. JjA Tbe beet of goods always in •3k carried in stock and every- W rf thing warranted es represent- TJ # Eapeclal Attention Paid te W -vl Mail Orders. oi # EMPORIUM, PA. $ sDec&xcßfc*: ) 60 TO S IJ. Jjiusler'jj J Broad Street, Emporium, Pa., 1 J Wiere yen can set anything JOB want la C C iha line at / S Groceries, ✓ S Provisions, ? P FLOOR, SAI.T MEATS, X ( SMOKED MEATS, \ ) CANNED G'JODS, ETC., ) J leu, Cotfm, Frnlti, OofwUentiy, ) S Tttacct s&4 Clf art. C V Good# Dcllyerrd Pre* any / / riace In l ovyu. l J cill m SEE ■£ AID err PUCES. \ ? mi P. k E. BEP«T < EBPORII'I Bottling Works, JOHN MCDONALD, Proprietor. Kaar t. & B. Depot, Emporium, Pa. Bottler and Shlppai of Rochester Lager Beer, BEST BEiJDS QP EYrOP.T. The Manufacturer of Soil Orlnk* and Daaler In Choloc STinc, and Pure Liqnon. We keep none bat the very beef Seer and are prepared to till Orders o» ihort notice. Private families served flail/ if desired. JOHN MCDONALD. Caveats, Trade-Marka obtained and all Patr i eflt buaiaess conduc»ed for MOOCRATC FfC*. ! our ornct is o*po»it* U, * | i and we can secure patent ia lea* time LLAU tAose , 'remote (rom Washington.i 1 ' 1 Send model, drawing cr photo., with deacrip-< | I tion. We advise, it patentable or not, free of] ( 'ciwfe. Our fee not due till patent is secured. , ► !> A PAMPHLKT 41 How to Obtain Patents," with ,»oost of same in* the U. S. and foreign countries] [sent Irw. Address, iC.A.SWOW&CO.i Tilt* t'AfKtt f\ BJ" 112 \ 18 OH FILE IN tte MEW YORKo"r. 1 LH. KELirOQ yEWSFfIR