PLAYING WITH MY BABY BUY. it may be that fortune leaves me. It may be that, luiue deceives me, Ami that pleasure's earl.v vintugehas leaked from my cup of <•<>: But my losses -'"id my crosses , Are to rac no more than d oss is I When I rolic when 1 frolic with my little t baby boy. j 1 It in ay bo that I'm a sinner With my chances growing thinner, That thegold within my nature suffers much from base alloy; But 1 know that I'm a me'low: Simple-hearted, tender fellow When I romp and play and frolic with my j bright-eyed babv boy. It may be that I grow weary Sometimes of the world s > dreary, And that moody meditation muv too oft rnv i mind employ; But his merry eyes beguiling Change mv humor into smiling As I practice many an antic with my laugh ing baby hoy. When the little fell-w's dreaming. And the golden c .scade'a streaming From his head upon my bosom, uud he j sleeps without annoy, Then I kiss the hps of laughter, Thinking that the great hereafter Will be cheerless if I cannot frolic with my ! babv boy. —[Wm. T. Dumas, In Atlanta Constitution. SayfllFrom OlflOceai'sSaw. Oil the 29th of January, 1885, the schooner Alfred Yitterv, Captain Boor, was lying becalmed in the South Pari tic Ocean. She was eleven days out from the Solomon Croup and was bound fur Maryborough, Queensland, Australia. witJi ninety-seven Polynesians on board that had contracted to work for a term of years on plantations. It was a glorious clay froiu un artist's standpoint. A marine painter might have drawn inspira tion from the deep, dark blue of the sky. the trans lucent tints of the over-changing sea and the radiant splendor of the sun. Captain Boor, however, was no marine , artist, but a shrewd coininon-sen.se skip per, who hated a calm and had no appre ciation of the beauties of Old Ocean at rest. What he chiefly doted on was a piping breeze, especially when ho bad a hundred hungry Polynesians on board, as was then the case. The skipper strode the dock impatient ly. The sails Happed idly as the s hooner rose and fell in the gentle swell of the Pacific. The Polynesians were clustered in picturesque groups on duck, some of thorn singing the low, monotonous and barbaric chants of their race, others en gaged heart and soul in the calm delight of chewing betel. A queer lot they seemed to the sailors, with their dark copper-colored skins, their heads well i thatched with moss of woolly lmir and their deep-sunk eyes and short noses. During the eleven days that had passed since they embarked on the schooner from their crescont-sliaped and beauti- i fully-carved canoes many a malodiction had been hurled at their heads by the seamen, who wore unable to get any ! sleep in their watch below owing to the coaseloss singing and tlio perpetual I thrumming on bamboo drums much re sembling tho tom-toins of India. Nobody to look at them in their scanty but neat ly fringed girdles—their sole attire— 1 would imagine them to bo cannibals, whose highest ambition was to feast on cold boiled baby. But such was the frozen truth. Tho speculators, however, were getting avenged on them for many a missionary murdered and digested. Those ninefy -80 veil Polynesians wero going into slavery as pronounced and cruel as ever existed on the island of Cuba. The plantations of Queensland are noted for their horrors, hut the (oveminent winks I at them, the innocent islanders, men ami women, chewed betel, sang songs ami beat the drum as though there were ;io such '• institutions" in existence as tho flesh-destroying thongs attached to the whips of burly and brutal overseers. ; They made their acquaintance later. " I fear those copper-colored devils will eat their heads off before we get to Maryborough, if this weather lasts," ob served the captain to the mate. You see ho had contracted with the specula tors to carry them to their destination at so much a head, for each one delivered alive, the ship supplying them with their food, consisting chiefly of rice and suit i fish. The skipper was a capital fellow. He had no sympathy with the business in which he was engaged, hut his owners had chartered the schooner, and he nat mtill\ wanted to make us much uioiiev as possible. So all that golden afternoon - he was in rather a bud temper, pacing the quarter-deck impatiently and easting his eyes all around the horizon in tie hope of seeing welcome catspaws indicat ing a breeze. Something all at once caught his eye. 1 Seizing the telescope that was in its ac customed place on the skylight, ho ! climbed halfway up tho main rigging and had a look at an object broad on the Starboard beam. The sheets were hurled j aft on the port siilo and the vessel was bending southwest, lie remained aloft about leu minutes ami then came down. He told the mate that there was a ship's boat in sight with a sail set and appar ently in distress, and said that lie was going to hoc it there was anybody on board of her, if possible. A taint: breath of wind camo along from the northward, just sufficient to till the topsails and the main topmast stuv suil. "Haul aft the main and fore sheets, tisin down the head sheets, luff' all you can. sang out the captain in one breath. ' And so the schooner was headed as close as possible for the boat, which was not yet visible from the deck. '1 h presence of so small a craft 100 miles from the nearest point of land was rather surprising, and all hands felt anxious about her. She was now about seven miles dead to windward, and the schooner made a number of short tacks toward her. The wind was so light that it was a longand tedious task to come up with her. At length, about 5 o'clock, she was close alongside. An emaciated, haggard man was steering her. His beard and hair wero long and shaggy, and to use a homely simile, his eyes were like two burnt holes in a blanket. A line was thrown to him as he passed under the schooners stem. It was with the great est difficulty that lie managed to crawl 1 forward and take a turn around a cleat with the lino. Several of the crew jumped j down into the boat and assisted tho man to cliuib aboard tho schooner. As soon as he reached the deck he fainted, j He was placed on tho after hatch and a few drops of rum were forced between bis lips. I'nder this potent influence ho 1 rapidly revived. "NoWjiny lad," said the skipper, "don't try to talk; drink some of this soup and j then take a rest; you will soon be a inun j again." The poor fellow tried to mutter a word or two of gratitude. He gulped down a ( few swallows of soup, and after tolling the captain that his name was Bernard j (iilbov. and that lie sailed IG2 days be- . fore from San Francisco, Cub. lie was taken below and put into a bunk, where i he soon fell asleep. His boat was hoisted inboard in slior,' I order, the islanders tailing on to the j tackle fulls and singing a joyous song. She was a strange-looking craft. The ! carpenter pulled his rule out of his pocket ! and measured her. He dimensions were: 18 feet over all; beam, fi feet; depth. 2 ft. 0 ill. She was docked over, and her j 1 hull was divided into two compartments : by u water-tight bulkhead about G teat , ' from the stern. She had been rigged as a schooner, but only the foremast was 1 standing. The after compartment was t> feet ! long, with a hatch in the centre and with | a locker ou each side. She appeared to have been fitted out with u view to a deep-water voyage, but looked much the | worse for wear. Her bottom was covered with thick clusters of buruucles. Her ! rigging was rather rotten, and her deck ; was covered with sliine. I The islanders flocked round the boat, whose name was tho Pacific —painted in j small letters on her stern. They ex ; pressed a good deal of curiosity concern- j ing her, as was evident from their excited t ilk and gestures. The Pacific was j firmly lushed to ringbolts in the deck, I i everything on board of her being taken j ! out. There wasn't a scrap of food aboard; a ten-gallon keg contained four | and one-half inches of fresh water, and i i there was about half a gill of alcohol in j a druggist's bottle. That evening a fine breeze arose and tho schooner headed for j her destination, dancing over the waves ; gallantly and clipper-like. Next morning the steward woko up the poor fellow so providentially rescued from the rapacious jaws of death, whoso : fangs were about closing on him when ' the schooner cited him. He was much refreshed, and after taking a onp of cof fee and a slice of toast went on deck, whore the cook, who was u bit of a bar ber, cut his hair and trimmed his beard. Then ho had a good wash and was ready for breakfast. While bo was partaking of a plentiful meal, which he said tasted better than any he hud oaten since leaving San Francisco, he told his story, often hesita ting for a word, and speaking in a strange tone that reminded one of ghosts. His name, as before mentioned, was Bernard Gilboy. His home was in Buf falo, N. V. From boyhood his hobby wis the sailing of small boats, and lie hud gone to sea at an early ago. It ap pears that reading the account of Capt. Johnson crossing the Atlantic alouo in a boat 15 feet keel, 5 foot 0 inches beam uud 28 inches depth, induced him to un dertake a voyage to Australia from San Francisco. Accordingly he contracted with Burns & Kneussof that porttobuild him the boat picked up the day previous of the dimensions given above. She was launched on Friday, Aug. 3, 188*2, and she sailed on Friday, Aug. 18. Is thero any wonder that she camo to grief? The only cause for astonishment is tliut her owner didn't fetch up for a full due in Davy Jones's looker, for as every sailor knows, Friday is a most unlucky day. On August *J lie got his olearanoe from tho Custom-Housc. The craft had very little free-board. She was laden with 14 ten gallon casks of water, 105 pounds of hard tack packed in fifteen-pound watertight tin cans, two dozen cans of roast beet in two-and-a-half-pound cans, two dozen roast chickens in one pound cans, two do/,, one-pound cans of salmon, two dozen cans ■ of boneless pigs' feet, two dozen cans of pouches, two dozen cans of condensed milk, twenty-five pounds of loaf sugar, one gross of matches in six bottles, half a gallon of alcohol in a druggist's glass jar, ten gallons of nut oil, five gallons of ker osono oil, three pounds of coffee, two pounds of tea, one ear of oastile soap, two pounds of lard, three pounds of nails, one wooden pump, twelve feet of half-inch hose, which he used as a syphon to get fresh water out of the kegs with, grains, hammer and hatchet, u few copper tacks, kerosene oil stove, pocket alcohol stove, two lamps, one pound of caudles, two compasses, barometer, and sextant, pat ent taffruil log, double-barrel shotgun, powder and shot, revolver and cartridges, ' clock uud watch,nine knives, anchor and sea drag, with about forty fathoms of one and a half inch line, a ball of spun-yarn j undn murlinspike,navigation books, sheet 1 chart of the South Pacific, an American Hug, clothing, one pair of twelve-foot oars, uud an umbrella, which he found bandy when the wind was light and the sun strong. Thus equipped Gilroy put to sea in the 1 frail boat Pacific. His usual course was ; to sail at night und heave to and rest i during the day. This he accomplished ■, us First lie threw his sea anchor overboard on tho weather side, hauled j down the jib, lowered the foresail, trimmed tho main sheet fiat down and lushed the helm admidships. Thus, us the boat drifted to leeward, the sea anchor kept her bead to sea and the main sail Btcadied her. Trimmed In this way the boat made quite good weather of it, j even in a heavy sea. I he Pacific made fair progress, with 1 little eventful happening until October; G, when Gilhoy caught a turtle, which he cut up und cooked. His previous prey had been bonitos uud Hying fish, which I ho caught ut rather rare intervals. On the 20tli day out he spoke the hurkentino Tropicvnnce, Capt. Burns, from Tahiti to San Francisco, in latitude 14 deg. 50 mill, south and longitude 140 i deg. 2 min. west. The captain supplied | Gilboy with as many oranges, bananas ; and limes as lie would take, und promised to report him on his arrival in San Fran -1 cisco. I he monotonous voyage went on until \\ ednesduv, December 13. The udveu turous Gilboy had reached 22 deg. 23 ; min. south latitude, and 178 dog. 43 min. oust longitude. The Pacific was jogging along under short sail, with the trade wind blowing strongly and a high sea running. At 9 o'clock at night a heavy • soa capsized tho boat. Gilboy, who was clad in a long oilskin coat over a heavy suit of clothes, came up on tho weather side und crawled on tho bottom of his unlucky craft. After working for several hours he contrivod to right her, but found that nearly all his stores and provisions wero either lost or destroyed. The only instruments ho hud loft to nav igate with were his sextant and patent > log, both his campasses being lost, but nevertheless he kept bravely on his course, though the mainmast was.gone. Gn Christmas Day ho overhauled his stock of provisions and found that lie had lomatuing twelve pounds of cuniied meat and fish, half a gallon of alcohol and ( fifteen gallons of water—a scanty store , with which to roach the nearest point of Australia, 1,200 miles distant. On Wednesday, January 3, he had left four pounds of beef, one quart of alcohol and j ten gullons of water. On January 7, [just as lie uwoke, he saw a bird standing jon tlio stern of tho bo.it. Ho wondered j ; that it did not fly away. As it turned its j j head to peck its tail feathers he made a ; grab ut it and caught it. It was as big us u small pigeon. He skinned it and 1 made soup of it. That day his remain . i ing stock was one two-pound can of beef. . u little iilcolnd and seven gallons of water. J ' On January 10 he caught another seu i bird, which, after flying about the boat, alighted oil his head. Next day lie caught another. On January 13 he ate the last of his beef, which was about two ounces. Fnuu that day until he was picked up lie existed on the flying fish that hap pened to drop on deck and an occasional sea bird. He husbanded his supply of water most carefully. This is an extract from his log of his last day on the Pu cific; "Monday, January 29. sunrise: Light, steady breeze, the weather being clear and pleasant; looked round the dock foi flying fish, but could not find any; I felt very weak and hungry. After taking my morning's allowance of alcohol there was Hut enough for another meal, which was about two teaspoonfuls. I measured the water, and found four audonc-hulf inches in the ten-gallon keg; so after this day I shall have nothing but water to sustain j life, and there being but little of that makes mo think 1 shall not lust long uii- I less I get relief. "For the first time I began to give up all hope of escaping from starvation ' and wonder how long it would bo before the end. I foil into a reverie, and re mained in nioditutioii for about un hour, when I looked to leeward and there saw a sail quite plainly, about eight miles off. ; I could hardly believe my eyes, but, real izing it wus no dream, I quickly altered :my course uud run before the wind, 1 which was very light, heuding to cross her bow. I caught hold of the urnbreliu which was lying on dcok, opened it and , kept waving it, in hopes of attracting their attention. After waving it for u short time it slipped out of iny haud and went overboard. I 4 ( Then I got the flag and fastened it on a stick, and kept waving it without at tracting any attention. 1 took my re volver, which had the last six cartridges in the chambers, and fired them off'with out any effect. I then huuled down the jib and made the flag fast to the upper part of it with the union down, hoisting I tho jib up again. By this time the ves i sel was right ahead of me and I feared 1 that she would pass without seeing me, ' | when finally I saw her tack, which con vinced me that I had been seen. I sailed ln-fore the wind and the vessel beat to ' windward toward me. The wind being light and the boat's bottom covered with barnacles, it was 5 o'clock before I got alongside. I sailed under her lee quarter ' , and was saved." ' Gilboy, having u strong constitution, inudo a complete recovery. He had J i sailed 7,000 miles all alone. On Febru ary 2 the Alfred Vittery arrived at Mary ~ I borough. Tlio doctor passed the Poly - , i nesiuus and they were sent ashore. Gil boy also left the schooner and his boat followed him. lie exhibited her in vari ous carts of Australia. The Sydney j Punch of February 17, 1883, laid some u j verses about him, aud he enjoyed a good i deal of newspaper fame. I don't know r ! what he is doing now. 1 have not seeu him for years, but I trust ho is alive and well, for he was a brave and manly American that deserved much from tliut (i i fickle jade, Fortune.—[New York lle a cordor. A Lost Lake, i A curious spectacle was to bo seen on ii the outskirts of Gainesvillo, Flu., re cently. Alachua lake, from ten to fif s teen miles in length and covering some f 40,000 acres of land, is no more. On its 1 banks wero lying thousands of dead fish, . dead alligators flouted ghastly in pools of i black water and tho atmosphere was , heavy with noxious gases. Men and boys ■ wero there in throngs with hoes aud i rakes, dragging to shore hundreds of fish • which had sought the pools for refuge. ! Tlio waters were fairly alive with their i struggles for existence. Except for a small stream known as Payne's oreek, , flowing from Newman's lake into the , Sink, the two main basins of the Sink and a few stagnant pools no water is now to be seen where a few yours ago steamers ■ were ploughing their way. This is the second time since 1823 tliut a similar oc currence has taken place. At tliut time the bed of the lake was a largo prairie—• Payne's prairie—having in it a body of water called the Sink and a small creek. In 18G8 heavy rains filled up the prairie, but the water disappeared after a short time, and the prairie was again dry land. In 1873, after a series of heavy rains, the Sink overflowed and the creek swelled to the dimensions of a lake. During | several years the waters increased till a larger lake was formed, and for fully fifteen years sufficient depth of water I stood over the prairie to allow of small steumers. During the last two years, i however, the waters have been gradually | lowering, and about four weeks ago they commenced going down with surprising rapidity, the lake falling about eight feet in ten days, until now nothing is left of Alachua Luke but the memory of it. i The Sink is considered the cause of this j change. There is evidently an under j ground passage connected, and for some I reason not understood this underground passage has been acting as a drain until ! all tlii! water in the lake has been drawn j off*.—[Providence Journal. A Vouug Cossack's Kide. When tho Czarewitch on his recent i journey visited the Krasnogorskiy settle -1 meat of Cossacks in Siberia, u boy Cos i suck, 13 years old, begged to accompany I him us body guard to the border of the . settlement, a distance of 143 vorsts (seven j vorsts uro five miles). Tho privilege 1 was granted him, and the boy, trim and . i nice on bis little horse, rode tlio whole j distance by the right wheel of the Czare witch's carriago at an average speed of r twenty vorsts an hour without the least sign of weariness. He hud a small satin i ensign with the imporiul escutcheon on . one side and the inscription, " God Save Our August Ataman," on the other. The L ensign had boon wrought by u Cossack , woman, the aunt of tho lad. The boy , received a gold watch und chain for his bravery, and his aunt received a diamond ring.—[New York Sun. i A Musical Novelty. I Dr. Alfred Steizner of Naples, Italy. 4 lias invented a new stringed instrument, with a compuss between that of the viola s und the violoncello. He calls it tho 1: 44 violottu." By means of this instru t ' liiont a new setting of quartets is made I possible. An experiment has been made b | with it in Dr. Stelzner's house at Wies f buden, at which Dr. Joachim was present, : und played the new instrument in some r ; quartet music composed by Dr. Steizner. • I l)r. Joachim showed his approval of the . new invention by ordering u " violotta " £ i for himself.—[New York Recorder. NOTES AND (OHMENTS. MRS. HKI.KN M. KKMINGTON of Sun Francisco claims to have boon the first to devise the use of threads running through hunk-note paper us it safeguard against counterfeiting. She received u patent for tho idea and the process, and is going to Washington to assert a claim against the Government for the use of her in vention, which, she says, it began five or six years before her patent rights ex pired. InK three great Indian chiefs of tho Northwest —Joseph, Moses and Lot—ar rived in Portland, Ore., recently to visit the exposition there, and created a stir among tho pioneers who had met the red warriors in earlier days. Of recent years these grim chieftains have been turning their scalping knives into pruning hooks. Lot in particular has made farmers of his people, and done much to promote in dustry among his tribe. Joseph is the chief whose strategy and skill kept his small army from being annihilated by the I'nited States and volunteer troops. Ir is reported thatun enormous amount of timber bus boon stolen from public lands in Wisconsin nnd Minnesota—fully 20,000,000 feet within the last three years—and a Government post is to be established to prevent further raids. Th® grants to railroads of alternate sections have led to the opening und settlement of vast superficies, which would else have remained in u state of nature; but, while the railroads have disposed of their land or money, tlie Government, to a con siderable extent, has held on and been the prey of the completed roads and timber-thieves at large. WACO, Tex., has un immense bath house that draws its water from an artesian well 1,870 feet deop. In tho pool, that holds 80,000 gallons and is refilled every two hours, the people of both sexes disport themselves in bathing costumes. The floor slopes from a depth of two to a depth of twelve feet, so that children are able to splash in the water at one end of the pool while expert swimmers take a ldunge at the other. The flow of water from the well is a mil lion gallons u day, and it has a natural temperature of 112 degrees Fahrenheit. In addition to tho nutatorium there are the usual hot and cold private baths. The water used is said to be of volcanic origin, and the Waco "boomers" are already predicting that their city will become a second llot .Springs. I JAPANF.SK pheasants are being domes ticated in California. They are choicer game birds for eating than the grouse, and, being wary, make excellent sport. ' There is no bird like them for breeding, three broods a year beiugnot uncommon. Some time ago twenty pairs of pheasants were turned out in Oregon, and now they fairly swarm in that State. The Fish and Game Commissioners are doing the work in California. Last autumu five pairs of pheasants wore liberated in the brush on tho ltuacho del Paso, and a number of Hocks have been seen there this season. They are at present pro tected by law, but in another year the hunters will ho allowed to Hush them that is to say, if they can be found out sido of Mr. Haggins's ranch, whero tho shooting is intended for his friends only. IT is now proposed to connect Swollen und Denmark l>y a tunnel through the Oeresund. Through, not under it, a huge iron pipe, big enough for passenger trains to run in, is to be laid from Elsi noro to Ilelsingborg, two English miles, on hollow iron pillars filled with concrete. It is proposed to so buiuuoo the weight of the pipe with tho displaced mass of water that the pillars will have scarcely any burden to carry. The tunnel is to be laid so deep as to bo secure from the action of tho waves and out of tho reach of tho biggest ships. One danger will remain, however, against which tho skill of the onginooro can provide no protec tion—tho peril from a sinking wreck. Should such a one strike tho tunnel it ! would be all up with it and with anything I that happened to ho en route between the two coasts in an instant. The costof ! tho tunnel is put at $1,000,000 or there- j about*. TIIE London Lancet denounces as i'ulso the theory that abundant hair is a sign of bodily or mental strength in man. It says that despite the .Samson precedent tho Chinese are mostly buhl, yet they form the most enduring of races. The average madhouse furnishes proof that long and thick hair is not a sign of intel lectuality. The easily wheedled Esau was hairy, while the mighty Ciesar was bald. 1 ' I .nag-haired men are generally weak and fanatical, and men with scant hair are the philosophers and statesmen and sol diers of the world," it concludes, though of course to this rule there are many ex ceptions. We suspect, facetiously adds the New York Tribune, that the Lancet will soon have an enormous circulation in bald-headed circles, while on tho other hand those of its renders who have plenty of hair will promptly write to "stop their paper." " FARM i NO pays in the West, and farming doesn't pay in the West," said a man from South Dakota. "In ten years I have made $">0,000 farming, starting with nothing. Men all around me havo starved to death, or pretty near it. One thing is certain. Big farming doesn't pay. There's Dulrymple, whose place is iiot far from mine. lie tried farming on a large scale 00,000 acres, I believe, lie was a good farmer, too. He had real executive ability, a fine organization. II ii had a tremendous advantage in got ting most of his machinery for nothing. I've known the agents of a reaper and mower factory to put sixty machines on Dnlryinplo's farm without charging him a cent, simply for tho advertisement. Yet Dulrymple has not made any money. 1 don't know why it is, unless a largo farm cannot make use of the small econ omics which make a small farm self-sus taining—the eggs, the butter, tho garden, the women's work in kitchen and round about." Si'KAKiNG of Labrador, u correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger says: "There is 110 law or any courts there. True, it is a Canadian territory, and the light houses upon the const and through the Straits of Belle Isle are under the cure of and supplied by the Colonial Board of Quebec, but there has never been any attempt to establish courts, build school houses or in any way to interfere with the domestic or political relations of the inhabitants. There are no taxes there. Every man does as ho pleases, so far as four of the law is concerned, but notwith standing this 1 heard of but few bad ac tions on the part of the people. Fish and seal abound there. The 'schools' of cod are remarkable. I have soon enough codfish in one school to satisfy the stomach of England and Ainoriea for a whole year. At Blanc Sablons llarbor, or what is called the 'Jersey Booms,' in the Straits of Bello Isle, they tell of a haul of herring in a mammoth seine from which they filled 5,000 barrels of fish, ami then had to cut the seine, letting out ten times as many fish us they hud bar aiUL" M.4lritri i llypnutmuK Many a medical man couli tell ot alarming conditions rosnili g from Improper attempts at hypnotising liy the unskilled amateur. One such mase has quite recently been reported by Dr. Solon. An amateur at a friend's house volunteered to hypne. tise another visitor, and after tvro trials succeeded so well that the sut* jeet became extremely excited, Hbsk the power of speech, and then passed into the condition of catalepsy; subse quently he had severe couvultions. He hail simply been hypnotised by being made to look at a diamond ring, and afterward the sight of anything glistening threw him into a state of violent excitement. The floor of. the room in which the physlejas dis covered him was covered with cush ions, as he frequently threw himself from the sofa onto the floor, and was in a condition of grave hysteria with fnaniaeal excitement. He was treated with a full dose of sedatives, chloral, sulphonal, bromides, and morphine, but at first showed no improvement. After ten days the convulsive attacks v/ere replaced by periodsduring which he sang persistently; he would sing every song lie knew without stopping. After a fortnight of this he had a high temperature for several days, and al together was very ill for three weeks. Such cases arc not so uncommon as is generally supposed. —[The Hospital. A \\ oiilerrul Town, Bessemer, Alabama, is to be found only on the newest maps. In 1887, the spot which the town of 40,000 in habitants now murks was overrun by a primitive forest. The accidental dis covery of all tlie materials—coal, ore, and lime—necessary to the establish ment of a great iron-producing and manufacturing center led to this sud den inrush of population. To-day the town counts over 900 coke ovens and numerous mighty rolling mills, which are in full swing day and night. Health (sthatHtate when all the organs of the body per j form their functions in regular and efficient man nei; and to remove nny obstruction to such action Is the proper duty of mod.cine. Hood's Sarsaparilla Olvos health by purifying the b'ood, toning the stomach nnd bowels, and Invigorating the kidneys and liver. Thoreforo, If you are In poor health, take llood's Sursiiparllla. 100 DOSOB One Dollar IIOOU'M l'llls—Best liver lnvlgorator and ca thai tic Reliable, ulToetivo, geutlo, P. Ice I&o. Nothfißftfff 081 Make H^ 5 " v Sheridau's Condition Powder! If you can't yet it send to us. It Is absolutely puro. Highly concentrated. In quan tity t c.iSU I vs th in ii tenth of a cent a day. Strictly a medicine. Prevents and cures all diseases. Good lor young chicks. Worth moro than gold when hens moult. Sample for C 6 cents in stampa. II vo puckuguii fI. 8 1-1 lb. can, by mall, $I M Six can* express paid. Sample copy of IIICmT I'OLL/UTY PAPER Sent J-'rcc. I. S. JOHNSON it CO., ti Custom llour.o St., Huston, Muss. JOHNSON'S *#odyh£ Originated by an Old Family Physician For INTERNAL as much as EXTERNAL use. Stops Pain, Cramps. Inflammation In body or limb, liko magic. Cures tTroup, Ahthma.ttolds.t atari h, Ijuno ltack, Btllf Joints and Strains. Full particulars tree. Price, evory whero, U6 eta. I. S. JOHNSON in CO., Boston, Mass. DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxburv. Mass., says Kennedy's Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep- Seated Ulcers of 40 years' standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, ex cept Thunder Ilutnoi, and Cancer that has taken root. I rice, |1.50. Sold by every Druggist in the United States and Canada. ORATEFUL-COMFORTINO. EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST. "Ily a thorough knowledgo of tho natural lawt wh eh govern tlio operatl >us of digestion and uutrl tl n, and by u carerul uppllc atlon of the flne proper tie*of ulcs lectul Cocoa, Mr. EppH has provldtd *ur breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured bov* crai.o which may save us many hoavy doctors' Dills. ' is oy tue Judiolbus use of such articles of diet thsi noomtUutloa may be gr dually built ui until .trong enougu to resist every teudonoy to disease. Jundruds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attauic wherever there Is a weak point, We may escape many a fatal shaft by koeplng our selves well f'trtlflel with pure blood a d a properly nourlJhod frame."— Servioa Uauette." Made simply with bollln/ water r milk. Sold only lu naif-uouu.l tins, y Grocer*. labelled thus; JA UKH KPl'rt A: CIO., Homoeopathic ChemUte, LONDON, i£ NO LAND. Ely's Cream Balm W i M. c U it E PpCATARBVoI CgARRHpI tI.V Ultos., M War run sr., N. V. • • THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD I TUTT'S • ®TINY LIVER PILLS# • have all the vlrt ueH of the larger ones; A equally effective J purely vegetable, V Exact alio ahown lu thin border. ®@•&9© • © 9 •• H4V FFVFR CURED 70 STAY CURED. Isfal ILV£■ HI We want the name nnd ad dressof every sufferer in the JPi ACTUM A f-S. and Canada. Address, \JC HO I iBSVIH P. Harold Hayes, M.D, Buffalo, H.Y. ■ Jvrstnhwtwar. 16 attjudicating claim j. attrslnoe. PBWSIOWB Ic all WOI.Ikir.H9H '■4 disabled. K fee for Increase. UiyearH ex perience. Write for I.awa. A.W. MCCOUMH K BONIS. WAHHINSTON, I). C. CINCINNATI. U PAfINTSHsI you ARE INVITED To call and inspect our im mense stock of DRY GOODS, Groceries, Provisions, FURNITURE, Etc. Our store is full of the new est assortment. The prices are the lowest. All are invited to see our goods and all will be pleased. J. P. McDonald, S. W. Corner Centre ami South Sts., t'reelund. FERRY & CHRISTY, dealers In Stationary, School Books, Periodicals, Song Books, Musical Instruments. CIGARS and TOBACCO, sifozesthsto- goods Window Fixtures and Shades, Mirrors, Pictures and Frames made to order. Pictures enlarged and Framed. Crayon Work a Specialty. ?,7 Centre St tr oppo MSPII IMB onmsffissiE tiio mime of every newspaper published, ha v. ing a circulation rating in the American News paper Directory of more than £>,ooocopies each issue, with the cost per line for advertising in them. A list of the best papers of local circula tion, in every city and town of more than f>.GU population with prices by the inch ft r our month. Special bids of daily, country, \ yinwe and class papers. Bargain offers ol value to small advertisers or those wishing to experi ment judicious: v with a small anion ut of nionev. Shows conclusivel> "how to get the most ser vice for the money," etc., etc. Sent post paid to any address for :J0 cents. Address, (JKO. P. ltoWKi.i. &i Co., l'ublisliers and Oeneral Adver tising Agents, 10 Spruce Street, New York • tfy. C. D. ROHRBACH, Dealer in Hardware, Paints, Varnish, Oil, Wall Paper, Mining Tools and mining Sup plies of all kinds, Lamps, Globes, Tinware, Etc. Having purchased the stock of Wm. J. Eckert and added a considerable amount to the present stock I am prepared to sell at prices that defy compe tition. Don't forget to try my special brand of MINING OIL. Centre Street, Freeland Pa. E. M. GERITZ, 2R years in Germany mid America, opposite the ( cut ml Hotel, ( outre Street, Freelnea. The Cheapest Repairing Store in town. Watches. Clocks and Jewelry. New Watches, Clocks and Jewelry on hand for the Holi. days; the lowest cash price in town. Jewelry repaired in short notice. All Watch Re pairing guaranteed for one year. Eight Day Clocks from $ll.OO to $12.00; New Watches from SI.OO up. E. M. GERITZ, Opposite Central Hotel, Centre St., Freeland. GO TO Fisher Bros. Livery Stable FOR FIRST-CLASS TURNOUTS At Short Notice, for Weddings, Parties nnd Funerals. Front Street, two squares below Freeland Opera House. JOB PRINTING aXJWUTSO LT THIS OJfiOl AT Lowest Living Prices. The undersigned has been appoint ed agent for the sale of G. B. Markle & Co.'a Highland Coal. 'lhe quality of the Highland Coal needs no recommendation, being hand picked, thoroughly screeued and free from Blate, makes it desirable for Domestic purposes. All orders left at the THIHI NK office will receive prompt attention. Price $3.75 per two-horse wagon load. T. A. BUCKLEY, Agent. PETER TIMONY, BOTTLER, And Dealer in all kinds of Liquors, Beer and Porter, Temperance Drinks, Etc., Etc. Geo.Ringler&Co.'s Celebrated LAGER BEER put in Patent Sealed Bottles here on the premises. Goods de livered in any quantity, and to any part of the country. FREELAND BOTTLING WORKS, Cor. Centre and Carbon Sta., Freeland. (Near Lehigh Valley Depot.) H. M. BRISLIN, UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER. Also dealer in FURNITURE of every description. Centre Street, above Luzerne, Freeland. The Mot Successful Remedy ever discov ered, aa It Is certain In Its effect* and does not blister. Read proof below : KENDALL'S SPMIN CURE. DKLVERNON, Pa., Nov. 27, Dfc. DR. IB J. KENDALL CO. : Gents—l would like to make known to those who are almost persuaded to use Kendall's Spavin Cure the fact that I think It Is a most excellent Liniment - I have used iton a Blood Spavin. The horse went oti three legs for three yeurs when 1 commenced to use your Kendall's Spavin Cur.-. I used tea hot ties on the horse ana have worked him for three years since and has not been lame. Yours kruly, WM. A. CURL. GERMANTOWN, N. Y., Nov. 2,1889. Dr. B. J. KENDALL CO., Euoeburgh Falls, Vt. Gents: In pralseof Kendall's Spavin Cure iwfl( say. that n year ago I hud :i valuable young horw b*. come very lame, hock enlarged and swollen. The horsemen about here (we have lio Veterinary Sur geon here) pronounced his lameness Blood Spavin or Thoroughpin, they r.ll told mo there was u< cure lor It, ho became about useless, and I con sidered him almost worthless. A friend told me of the merits of your Keudall'a fcpavlu Cure, so I bought a bottle, ami I could see very plainly great improvements immediately from its use,and before the bottle was used up I wnssutbdled that, it wan doing him a great deal of good. I bought a second bottle and before It was used up iuy horse waa cured and has been in the team doing heavy work all the season slneo last April, showing no more signs of It. 1 consider y.rnr Kendall's Spavin Cure, n valuable medicine, nnd it should lie In overy stablo la the land. Respectfully yours, EUGENIC DEWITT. Price $1 per bottle, or six bottles for ST. All drug - gists have It or can get it for you, or it will bo sent, to any address on receipt of price by the proprie - tors. DK. 11. J. KENDALL CO., EnoMburgh Falls, VertnoujL 801.1) NY AM, DIMJOOISTS. A. RUDEWIGK, GENERAL STORE. SOUTH IIEBERTON, PA. Clothing, Groceries, Etc., Etc. Agent for the sale of PASSAGE TICKETS From all the principal points in Europe, to all points in the United States. Agent for the transmission of MONEY To all parts of Europe. Checks, Drafts, and Letters of Exchange on Foreign Banks cashed at reasonable ralva. S. KUDU]WICK, Wholesale Dealer In Imported Id randy, II 'irie And All Kinds Of LIQUORS. THE BEST Beer, JPorter, A.le And Brown St© tit. Foreign and Domestic. Cigars Kept 011 Hand. S. RUDEWIGK, SOUTH HEBERTON. A pamphlet of information nnd nh. /ffjSU the laws,showing How LoA® Broadway!'^^^^